Top Items:
John A. Nagl / New York Times:
Jim Mattis and I Fought Together. No One Called Him Mad Dog. — Jim Mattis was a scholar of war, blunt, courageous and loyal to his troops. Our enemies will cheer his departure. — Mr. Nagl is a former Army officer. — I met Jim Mattis in Anbar Province, Iraq, in 2004.
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Robert J. Samuelson / Washington Post:
Wake up. America's military isn't invincible. — The most uncovered story in Washington these days is the loss of U.S. military power — a lesson particularly important in light of recent events: the resignation of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis; President Trump's rash decision to withdraw U.S. troops …
David Axe / The Daily Beast:
Trump's Incoming Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan Pushed Military to Buy Weapons It Didn't Want — Patrick Shanahan's corporate allies have thrived under Trump. Now he's going to be Secretary of Defense. — By DAVID AXE12.23.18 6:37 PM ET — By tapping former Boeing executive Patrick Shanahan …
Discussion:
Mediaite, USNI News, Raw Story, NPR and Associated Press
Dan Lamothe / Washington Post:
Patrick Shanahan, Trump's pick for acting defense secretary, steps into spotlight after Mattis's ouster
Lolita C. Baldor / Associated Press:
After criticism, Trump pushes out Mattis sooner than planned
After criticism, Trump pushes out Mattis sooner than planned
Discussion:
Splinter
Philip Rucker / Washington Post:
Trump forces Mattis out two months early, names Shanahan acting defense secretary
Trump forces Mattis out two months early, names Shanahan acting defense secretary
Discussion:
Associated Press, Task & Purpose and Washington Monthly
Nancy A. Youssef / Wall Street Journal:
Departing Defense Secretary Jim Mattis to Leave Jan. 1
Departing Defense Secretary Jim Mattis to Leave Jan. 1
Discussion:
The Guardian, Raw Story, Just Security and Los Angeles Times
Washington Post:
Treasury secretary startles Wall Street with unusual pre-Christmas calls to top bank CEOs — Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin startled financial analysts, bankers and economists on Sunday by issuing an unusual s declaring that the nation's six largest banks had ample credit to extend to American businesses and households.
Discussion:
Politico, Financial Times, Daily Wire, Raw Story, skippy the bush kangaroo and Splinter
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Binyamin Appelbaum / New York Times:
Stock Market Rout Has Trump Fixated on Fed Chair Powell
Stock Market Rout Has Trump Fixated on Fed Chair Powell
Discussion:
The Atlantic, Bloomberg and The Guardian
Adam Liptak / New York Times:
Roberts, Leader of Supreme Court's Conservative Majority, Fights Perception That It Is Partisan — “We don't work as Democrats or Republicans,” he has said, a theme he has returned to while trying to strike a delicate balance as the chief justice. — WASHINGTON — In his first 13 years …
Discussion:
SCOTUSblog
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Kevin Daley / The Daily Caller:
Supreme Court Intervenes In Apparent Mystery Mueller Case — Chief Justice John Roberts stayed a subpoena and contempt order in a case that likely arose from Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation in a Sunday night order. — Sunday's order could mark the first time that the Supreme Court …
Kevin Bohn / CNN:
Chief Justice pauses contempt order for mystery company in Mueller investigation — (CNN)Chief Justice John Roberts on Sunday issued a temporary pause on an order holding an unnamed, foreign government-owned company in contempt over a mystery court case related to special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation.
Andrew Ross Sorkin / New York Times:
How Banks Unwittingly Finance Mass Shootings — The New York Times reviewed hundreds of documents including police reports, bank records and investigator notes from a decade of mass shootings. Many of the killers built their stockpiles of high-powered weapons with the convenience of credit.
Discussion:
Axios and twitchy.com
Bloomberg:
U.S. Stocks Hit 19-Month Low as D.C. Tumult Weighs: Markets Wrap — Trump team attempts to assure markets over Powell, liquidity — Many exchanges are shut or will close early on Christmas Eve — U.S. stocks tumbled to the lowest since May 2017 as the turmoil in Washington kept investors …
Associated Press:
Court says Justice Ginsburg up and working after surgery — WASHINGTON (AP) — Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is up and working as she recuperates from cancer surgery. — A spokeswoman for the court, Kathy Arberg, also says that Ginsburg remained in New York at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center on Sunday.
Discussion:
Politico, Townhall, The Week, Joe.My.God. and Splinter
Michael R. Bloomberg / Bloomberg:
Trump Rings in the New Year in the Worst Possible Way — One week sums up a failing presidency. — There are many reasons to be optimistic about 2019. The increasingly isolated man in the Oval Office is not one of them. — With the first two years of Donald Trump's presidency drawing to a close …
Discussion:
AOL
Peter Hamby / Vanity Fair:
“They Are Suspicious of Beto”: Why Are Democrats Trying to Annihilate an O'Rourke Campaign Before It Has Even Started? — The howls about O'Rourke from the Chapo wing of the Internet say as much about Bernie Sanders's diminished stature as they do about the golden boy from Texas.
Discussion:
Politico
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David Ignatius / Washington Post:
What Trump's Syria decision means on the front lines of the fight against the Islamic State — The voice of Gen. Mazloum Abdi, the Kurdish commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces militia, is tight and controlled as he describes President's Trump's decision to withdraw U.S. troops …
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Sarah El Deeb / Associated Press:
Turkey masses troops near Kurdish-held Syrian town
John McWhorter / The Atlantic:
The Virtue Signalers Won't Change the World — Feminist history is typically described in three waves: The struggle to secure voting rights, then workplace rights, and third—roughly—to upend stereotypes. The battle against racism and its effects is often described in a similar three-part timeline …
Walter Russell Mead / Wall Street Journal:
Trump's Populist Schism Over Syria — His troop-withdrawal plan is politically risky. The Republican base is more hawkish than isolationist. — The most surprising thing about President Trump's decision to overrule his top advisers and withdraw U.S. forces from Syria and Afghanistan isn't that it was improvised and disruptive.
Nicholas Fandos / New York Times:
A Shutdown for Weeks? Washington Merely Shrugs — As a partial shutdown of the federal government entered its second day on Sunday and the prospect of a quick resolution to a dispute over President Trump's border wall slipped further out of grip, a normally fevered Washington found itself mustering little …
Discussion:
Outside the Beltway, Daily Kos, Politico and CNN
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