Top Items:
Detroit Free Press:
Joe Biden has doubled his lead over Donald Trump in Michigan, poll says — LANSING — Former Vice President Joe Biden has increased his lead over President Donald Trump to 12 percentage points in Michigan, where voters are unhappy with Trump's response to the coronavirus pandemic, according to a new poll.
Discussion:
Axios
RELATED:
Mark Murray / NBC News:
Poll: 80 percent of voters say things are out of control in the U.S. — WASHINGTON — Eight out of 10 voters believe that things are out of control in the United States, with majorities still concerned about the spread of the coronavirus, pessimistic about the economy returning to normal …
Discussion:
The Hill
Michael C. Bender / Wall Street Journal:
Americans Are More Troubled by Police Actions in Killing of George Floyd Than by Violence at Protests, Poll Finds — Eighty percent feel country is spiraling out of control, according to Wall Street Journal/NBC poll — WASHINGTON—Americans by a 2-to-1 margin are more troubled by the actions …
Jonathan Martin / New York Times:
Vote for Trump? These Republican Leaders Aren't on the Bandwagon — Former President George W. Bush and Senator Mitt Romney won't support Mr. Trump's re-election, and other G.O.P. officials are mulling a vote for Joe Biden. — WASHINGTON — It was one thing in 2016 for top Republicans …
RELATED:
Jacob Knutson / Axios:
Colin Powell says he will vote for Biden over Trump — Former Secretary of State and retired four-star Gen. Colin Powell said on CNN's “State of the Union” Sunday that he will be voting for Joe Biden in November, rebuking President Trump as a liar and claiming he has “drifted away” from the Constitution.
Discussion:
The Daily Caller and Breitbart
David Martin / CBS News:
Trump demanded 10,000 active-duty troops deploy to streets in heated Oval Office meeting — In a heated and contentious debate in the Oval Office last Monday morning, President Trump demanded the military put 10,000 active duty troops into the streets immediately, a senior administration official told CBS News.
RELATED:
Robert Burns / Associated Press:
Analysis: White House, Pentagon tensions near breaking point — WASHINGTON (AP) — Tensions between the White House and Pentagon have stretched to near a breaking point over President Donald Trump's threat to use military force against street protests triggered by George Floyd's death.
Ryan Browne / CNN:
Exclusive: DC National Guard Commander says additional forces could leave capital as early as Monday
Exclusive: DC National Guard Commander says additional forces could leave capital as early as Monday
Discussion:
Bloomberg, The Hill and New York Post
Jack Arnholz / ABC News:
Mayor Muriel Bowser says Trump's response to protests brought out more demonstrators — The Washington, D.C., mayor appeared on ABC's “This Week.” — President Donald Trump's comments and federal response to the recent George Floyd protests encouraged more people to demonstrate this weekend …
Discussion:
Washington Post, The Hill, Politico, Daily Kos and Vox
RELATED:
Emily Bloch / Florida Times Union:
Jacksonville-area Naval Academy alumni board member resigns after accidentally broadcasting racial slurs — Scott Bethmann, a now-former Naval Academy Alumni Association Board of Trustees member, resigned from his position Saturday after an accidental Facebook Live video broadcast …
Associated Press:
Protesters topple Confederate statue in Virginia capital — The statue of Confederate Gen. Williams Carter Wickham lies on the ground after protesters pulled it down Saturday, June 6, 2020, in Monroe Park in Richmond, Va. The statue had stood in the park since 1891. (Alexa Welch Edlund/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP)
Discussion:
Axios
RELATED:
Sabrina Moreno / Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Protesters pull down Confederate statue in Richmond's Monroe Park
Protesters pull down Confederate statue in Richmond's Monroe Park
Discussion:
The Hill
Farnaz Fassihi / New York Times:
A Daughter Is Beheaded, and Iran Asks if Women Have a Right to Safety — The killing of a 14-year-old girl in Iran has shaken the country and forced an examination of its failure to protect women and children. — Before he beheaded his 14-year-old daughter with a farming sickle, Reza Ashrafi called a lawyer.
Margaret Sullivan / Washington Post:
What's a journalist supposed to be now — an activist? A stenographer? You're asking the wrong question. — With the country in turmoil over racial injustice, a public health crisis and devastating job losses, it should be no surprise that journalists are caught up in the tumult.
Adam Kelsey / ABC News:
Acting DHS secretary claims no ‘systemic racism problem’ with law enforcement — In response to Wolf, Rep. Val Demings said, “We have a lot of work to do.” — As protests of police brutality continue across the country in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd in police custody …
RELATED:
CBS News:
Transcript: Attorney General Bill Barr on “Face the Nation,” June 7, 2020 — The following is a transcript of an interview with Attorney General Bill Barr that aired Sunday, June 7, 2020, on “Face the Nation.” — MARGARET BRENNAN: A senior administration official told our CBS' David Martin …
Discussion:
JONATHAN TURLEY and The Hill
Craig R. McCoy / The Philadelphia Inquirer:
Stan Wischnowski resigns as The Philadelphia Inquirer's top editor — Stan Wischnowski, the top editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer, has announced his resignation, days after discontent among the newspaper's staff erupted over a headline on a column about the impact of the civil unrest following …
Discussion:
The NewsGuild …, The Hill, Instapundit and The Wrap, more at Mediagazer »
Miriam Berger / Washington Post:
Pittsburgh paper accused of barring black reporters from covering protests, censoring stories — Photojournalist Michael Santiago was part of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette team that in 2019 won the paper a Pulitzer Prize, journalism's highest accolade, for its breaking news coverage of the Tree of Life synagogue massacre.
Discussion:
Associated Press and Pittsburgh City Paper, more at Mediagazer »
NBC News:
In Klamath Falls, Oregon, victory declared over antifa, which never showed up — About 200 protesters came to Sugarman's Corner, the local hotspot in downtown Klamath Falls, Oregon, last Sunday night to protest the killing of George Floyd. — Like in many of the protests that have recently sprung …
Discussion:
Lawyers, Guns & Money, Washington Post and Daily Kos
Amie Parnes / The Hill:
Biden faces new hurdle: Winning as front-runner — Joe Biden is suddenly a clear favorite in the general election battle against President Trump given rising poll numbers nationally and in key swing states, meaning he must now figure out how to run as a front-runner.
New York Times:
How Police Unions Became Such Powerful Opponents to Reform Efforts — Half a decade after a spate of officer-involved deaths inspired widespread protest, many police unions are digging in to defend members. — Over the past five years, as demands for reform have mounted in the aftermath …
Marc Caputo / Politico:
Chainsaw-wielding racist gets boosted by a top Trump aide as race protests sweep the nation — President Donald Trump and his allies for years have amplified racist messages on Twitter while simultaneously reaching out to black and Hispanic voters, a dissonant balancing act that's now rocking …
Discussion:
The Intercept, Mediaite, Fox News, Washington Post and Raw Story
Juan Vidal / NPR:
Your Bookshelf May Be Part Of The Problem — One of my favorite passages from Black Boy, Richard Wright's poetic and searing memoir, which turns 75 this year, goes like this: … Black Boy traces Wright's development from a troubled youth who encountered bigotry daily in the Jim Crow-era American South …
Katrin Bennhold / New York Times:
Has ‘America First’ Become ‘Trump First’? Germans Wonder — One week after Chancellor Angela Merkel told President Trump she would not attend the Group of 7 meeting he wanted to host, he decided to withdraw 9,500 troops from her country. — BERLIN — When Chancellor Angela Merkel told President Trump …
RELATED:
Harry Enten / CNN:
Silent majorities are a misnomer — (CNN)A few days ago, President Donald Trump tweeted, “SILENT MAJORITY!” amid the recent protests. The President may be hoping that there is a group of people who support him and his positions, yet aren't being captured by the popular zeitgeist.
USA Today:
After Floyd killing, we need a truth and reconciliation commission on race and policing — The instinct for many Americans with deeply felt grievances is to rage. Decades of protests — many peaceful, some violent — have yielded insufficient progress in the quest for better relations between the police and those who are policed.