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11:00 AM ET, January 2, 2019

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Mitt Romney / Washington Post:
The president shapes the public character of the nation.  Trump's character falls short.  —  Mitt Romney, a Republican from Utah and the party's 2012 nominee for president, will be sworn into the U.S. Senate on Thursday.  —  The Trump presidency made a deep descent in December.
RELATED:
David M. Drucker / Washington Examiner:
Romney's attack prompts call to protect Trump from 2020 primary challenger  —  Mitt Romney's scorching critique of President Trump in a New Year's Day op-ed has sparked a call from within the Republican National Committee to change party rules to protect Trump from any long-shot primary challenge in 2020.
Discussion: Talking Points Memo
Niv Elis / The Hill:
Romney slams Trump's character in new op-ed
Mark Leibovich / New York Times:
Harry Reid Has a Few Words for Washington  —  The former Senate majority leader on President Trump and Senator Chuck Schumer, and on why he doesn't regret ending the filibuster for judicial appointments.  —  Early on the afternoon of Dec. 11, about an hour after an Oval Office meeting between President Trump …
RELATED:
Devan Cole / CNN:
Harry Reid: Trump is ‘amoral’ and 'the worst president we've ever had'
Discussion: Althouse
USA Today:
Trump illegally asked Russia to help him win in 2016.  He shouldn't get away with it.  —  Trump's public request for Russian help in finding Hillary Clinton's emails was a violation of US law.  There are ways to hold him accountable.  —  CONNECT  —  Prosecutors triggered a national firestorm …
Discussion: POLITICUSUSA and Raw Story
Rachael Bade / Politico:
Why Trump has spared Pelosi from his personal vitriol — so far  —  When President Donald Trump took to Twitter last weekend to blame Democrats for the government shutdown, he notably bypassed his party's favorite foil: Nancy Pelosi.  —  And when Fox News teed up a chance for the president …
Discussion: CNBC, New York Times and POLITICUSUSA
RELATED:
Politico:
POLITICO Playbook: Welcome back ... Shutdown, Day 12
Discussion: Vanity Fair
Howard Kurtz / Fox News:
Former NY Times editor rips Trump coverage as biased  —  President Trump appears content to ride out partial government shutdown stalemate over border security funding  —  A former executive editor of the New York Times says the paper's news pages, the home of its straight-news coverage, have become “unmistakably anti-Trump.”
Mike Allen / Axios:
House Democrats are set to go for the jugular on health care  —  With their very first vote when the new Congress opens tomorrow, House Democrats plan to pounce on one of Republicans' biggest political vulnerabilities, the lawsuit to wipe out the Affordable Care Act.
RELATED:
Nolan D. McCaskill / Politico:   House Dem majority welcomes first black female floor director
Edward-Isaac Dovere / The Atlantic:
Can a Democrat Win the Presidency on Climate Change?  —  OLYMPIA, Wash.—What if a meteor were hurtling toward the Earth, about to kill millions and reshape life on the planet as we know it?  —  And what if the president, instead of doing anything to help, made it worse in just about every way …
Discussion: Political Wire
Nathaniel Rakich / FiveThirtyEight:
How Elizabeth Warren Could Win The 2020 Democratic Primary  —  It's as if we skipped right from 2018 to 2020.  On Monday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren became the first major Democratic candidate to formally dip a toe in the water of the 2020 presidential campaign, announcing the creation of an exploratory committee.
RELATED:
CNN:   Axelrod: Why Warren will be such a major player in 2020
New York Times:
Shutdown Leaves Food, Medicine and Pay in Doubt in Indian Country  —  SAULT STE.  MARIE, Mich. — For one tribe of Chippewa Indians in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, the government shutdown comes with a price tag: about $100,000, every day, of federal money that does not arrive to keep health clinics staffed …
Discussion: Axios
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
The Trump Tax Cut: Even Worse Than You've Heard  —  Skeptical reporting has still been too favorable.  —  The 2017 tax cut has received pretty bad press, and rightly so.  Its proponents made big promises about soaring investment and wages, and also assured everyone that it would pay for itself; none of that has happened.
Michael Bachner / The Times of Israel:
Ohio hospital condemns ex-resident who said she would give Jews ‘the wrong meds’  —  Lara Kollab, 27, stopped working at Cleveland Clinic in September; website publishes dozens of her anti-Semitic, Holocaust-minimizing tweets  —  A hospital in Cleveland, Ohio, said it has fired a doctor …
Lamar Alexander / Washington Post:
Trump could reopen the government and build a lasting legacy all at once  —  Lamar Alexander, a Republican, represents Tennessee in the U.S. Senate.  He is chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions.  —  In the summer of 2015, President Barack Obama invited Sen. Patty Murray …
Michael Grunwald / Politico:
Yes, 2019 Is the Year You Were Worrying About  —  Once again, I bring you good tidings of great joy!  —  Unemployment in the United States is at its lowest level since 1969, consumer confidence is near its highest level since 2000, and crime in the nation's largest cities is at its lowest level since 1990.
Associated Press:
US fires tear gas across Mexico border to stop migrants  —  TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) — U.S. authorities fired tear gas into Mexico during the first hours of the new year to repel about 150 migrants who tried to breach the border fence in Tijuana.  —  U.S. Customs and Border Protection …
RELATED:
Nick Visser / HuffPost:
Border Patrol Agents Fire Tear Gas Into Mexico As Migrants Attempt To Cross Into U.S.
Greg Ip / Wall Street Journal:
The World Is Getting Quietly, Relentlessly Better  —  If we can solve global poverty, we can solve other problems like climate change  —  If you spent 2018 mainlining misery about global warming, inequality, toxic politics or other anxieties, I'm here to break your addiction with some good news …
Vera Mironova / Foreign Policy:
The New Face of Terrorism in 2019  —  Forget the Middle East—it's time to prepare for attacks from the former Soviet Union.  —  The way Westerners think about Islamist terrorism has grown dangerously outdated.  For decades, officials have focused on attacks launched by Middle Easterners.
Ehsan Bodaghi / Al-Monitor:
Iran drought turns political as lawmakers fight over water share  —  A general view shows the Si-o-Se Pol Bridge (33 Arches Bridge) over the Zayandeh Rud River in Esfahan, which now runs dry due to water extraction before it reaches the city, Esfahan, Iran, April 11, 2018.
Mark Pulliam / American Greatness:
RBG's Hubris Is a Gift for Donald Trump  —  The 85-year old Ruth Bader Ginsburg, appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by President Bill Clinton in 1993, is approaching her 25th anniversary as a justice.  She is historic in many respects: the second female to serve on the high court …
Discussion: Misrule of Law
Mike Allen / Axios:
Democrats' 2020 race is about to speed up  —  After two months of behind-the-scenes jockeying since the midterms, Democrats' race for president is about to burst into the open with a series of candidacy announcements and staff hires, 2020 operatives tell me.  —  What's happening: “This has been a slow dance,” one top strategist said.
Discussion: Political Wire
Cameron McWhirter / Wall Street Journal:
To Woo Millennials, Atlanta Considers Covering Highways With Parks  —  Proposals draw inspiration from Dallas project  —  ATLANTA—Leaders of this southern city want to draw more young workers, and their strategy includes covering congested downtown highways with acres of green park land.
David E. Sanger / New York Times:
Kim and Trump Back at Square 1: If U.S. Keeps Sanctions, North Will Keep Nuclear Program  —  Nearly two years into his presidency and more than six months after his historic summit meeting with Kim Jong-un of North Korea, President Trump finds himself essentially back where he was at the beginning …
CNBC:
Dow kicks off 2019 with a drop of more than 350 points  —  U.S. stocks fell sharply on Wednesday to start off 2019 as disappointing economic data from China and Europe and lingering concerns over global trade hampered risk appetite.  —  The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped about 360 points …
Carrie Johnson / NPR:
Trump's Judicial Appointments Were Confirmed At Historic Pace In 2018  —  The Trump administration more than doubled the number of judges it confirmed to federal appeals courts in 2018, exceeding the pace of the last five presidents and stocking the courts with lifetime appointees …
Discussion: Political Wire
 
 
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 More Items: 
Washington Post:
In shutdown, national parks transform into Wild West — heavily populated and barely supervised
Discussion: CNN, Yellowstone Insider and Hullabaloo
John LeBoutillier / The Hill:
Predictions: Trump goes, unexpected candidate emerges in 2019
Discussion: POLITICUSUSA and Hill Reporter
Susan Davis / NPR:
Lawmakers Hope New House Day Care Will Keep Staff On Capitol Hill
Discussion: Hullabaloo
Doug Bandow / The American Conservative:
Afghanistan, the Longest War in American History
Devan Cole / CNN:
Warren says she will donate her congressional salary during shutdown
Discussion: LifeZette
Ben Kesling / Wall Street Journal:
Powerful Antitank Missiles Put U.S. Forces in Middle East at Risk
Martin Wolf / Financial Times:
The future might not belong to China
Discussion: Marginal REVOLUTION
 Earlier Items: 
Thomas Adamson / Associated Press:
US, Israel exit UN cultural agency, claiming bias
Robert D. Kaplan / New York Times:
Time to Get Out of Afghanistan
Christopher Buskirk / Spectator USA:
The shutdown proves how redundant a lot of the government is
Glenn Thrush / New York Times:
As China Talks Begin, Trump's Trade Negotiator Tries to Keep President From Wavering
Discussion: CNBC
Sally Jenkins / Washington Post:
Gifting Daniel Snyder any money or land for a new Redskins stadium would be absolute madness
BBC:
Sabarimala temple: Indian women form ‘620km human chain’ for equality
Discussion: FiveThirtyEight and Al Jazeera
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Matthew Keys / The Desk:
Prime Video users will be able to watch local PBS stations and PBS Kids for free in coming months, and two new free PBS channels with ads starting November 26

John Koblin / New York Times:
NBC names Craig Melvin as Hoda Kotb's successor on Today, teaming up with Savannah Guthrie, starting January 13; Melvin has been Today's news anchor since 2018

Katie Kilkenny / The Hollywood Reporter:
On Fox News, LA Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong discussed his new approach to publish “views from both sides”, and said the paper had conflated news and opinion

 
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