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9:45 AM ET, September 8, 2021

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 Top Items: 
Russell Falcon / KXAN-TV:
Gov. Abbott: Abortion bill won't force rape victims to have babies, Texas will ‘eliminate’ rapists  —  AUSTIN (KXAN) — Texas Gov. Greg Abbott weighed in on a burning question related to the state's recently passed bill banning abortions after six weeks: what about victims of rape?
RELATED:
B.J. Rudell / The Hill:
Why the pro-choice movement must go on the offensive
Discussion: Chicago Sun-Times, Raw Story and Reason
Hans Nichols / Axios:
Scoop: Manchin backs as little as $1 trillion of Biden's $3.5 trillion plan  —  Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) has privately warned the White House and congressional leaders that he has specific policy concerns with President Biden's $3.5 trillion social spending dream — and he'll support as little …
RELATED:
David Ignatius / Washington Post:
Biden needs to turn the page from a painful August
Discussion: Reuters
New York Times:
Mexico's Supreme Court Votes to Decriminalize Abortion  —  The ruling sets a landmark legal precedent for potential legalization nationwide in the conservative Catholic country of some 120 million people.  —  MEXICO CITY — Mexico's Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that making abortion a crime …
RELATED:
Joyce Vance / MSNBC:
Texas' abortion law is the start of the Republican endgame … Last week the Supreme Court did something courts don't usually do: It gutted Roe v. Wade, a landmark legal precedent that stood for almost 50 years.  Since 1973, Roe has guaranteed the legal right to an abortion.
Discussion: Vox, Washington Post, CNN and Fox News
Rebecca Boone / Associated Press:
Idaho hospitals begin rationing health care amid COVID surge  —  BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho public health leaders announced Tuesday that they activated “crisis standards of care” allowing health care rationing for the state's northern hospitals because there are more coronavirus patients than the institutions can handle.
Perry Bacon / Washington Post:
How the rise of Politico shifted political journalism off course  —  Politico's sale last month to the German media company Axel Springer for a reported $1 billion was the culmination of a stunning rise of a publication founded in 2007 in what most people assumed was an overly-crowded market: coverage of Washington and U.S. politics.
Chloe Melas / CNN:
Britney Spears' father petitions to end her conservatorship  —  (CNN)Britney Spears' fight to end her court-ordered conservatorship took an unexpected turn on Tuesday when her father and the conservator of her estate, Jamie Spears, filed a petition to end the arrangement.
Wall Street Journal:
Sex and Drug Videos to Minors  —  After signing up for an account on TikTok, a 13-year-old user started by searching the app for “onlyfans”—the name of a site known for hosting adult entertainment—then watched a handful of videos in the results, including two selling pornography.
Scott Clement / Washington Post:
More Americans say 9/11 changed U.S. for worse than better, Post-ABC poll finds  —  Americans increasingly say the events of Sept. 11, 2001, had a more negative than positive impact on the country, and predictions for the pandemic's long-term impact are even more downbeat, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll.
Discussion: ABC News
Ivan Penn / New York Times:
From 4% to 45%: Biden Sets an Ambitious Goal for Solar Energy  —  The administration has offered only a broad outline of its plan, and many of the details will be decided by congressional lawmakers.  —  The Biden administration on Wednesday plans to announce an ambitious goal of producing almost half …
Harry Reid / LasVegasSun.com:
Abolishing the filibuster would pay dividends for Nevadans  —  Editor's note: Following a longstanding tradition, Brian Greenspun turned over his Where I Stand column to others in August.  Today, we continue to present columns submitted by those guests.  In presenting this year's series …
Lee Drutman / New York Times:
Quiz: If America Had Six Parties, Which Would You Belong To?  —  This essay is part of a series exploring bold ideas to revitalize and renew the American experiment.  Read more about this project in a note from Ezekiel Kweku, Opinion's politics editor.  —  America's two-party system is broken.
Reid Wilson / The Hill:
New Hampshire Democrat wins GOP-held state House seat  —  A former town councilor in Bedford narrowly won a seat in the New Hampshire state House on Tuesday, the first Democrat to win a previously Republican-held legislative district in any state since President Biden took office.
The Hill:
Trump set to back attorney in primary challenge to Cheney  —  Former President Trump is set to back a Wyoming attorney as she readies a primary challenge against Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), a source confirmed to The Hill on Wednesday, making good on his vow to help replace the outspoken Republican after she voted for his impeachment.
Discussion: HotAir and Politico
Washington Post:
The U.S. helped design Afghanistan's constitution.  It was built to fail.  —  The presidential system did not encourage compromise.  Nor did a flawed method of choosing members of parliament.  —  Creating a stable Afghanistan was never fundamentally a military problem.
Washington Examiner:
Ignore the grouchy Fauci: Vaccinated Americans are living their lives again  —  It started with 66,000 Hokies fans singing along to “Enter Sandman” in Blacksburg, Virginia, on Friday.  It continued with 80,000 Badgers fans dancing to “Jump Around” in Madison, Wisconsin, on Saturday.
Thomas B. Edsall / New York Times:
One Thing We Can Agree on Is That We're Becoming a Different Country  —  Mr. Edsall contributes a weekly column from Washington, D.C. on politics, demographics and inequality.  —  A highly charged ideological transition reflecting a “massive four-decade long shift in political values …
Ali Watkins / New York Times:
How the N.Y.P.D. Is Using Post-9/11 Tools on Everyday New Yorkers  —  Two decades after the attack on New York City, the Police Department is using counterterrorism tools and tactics to combat routine street crime.  —  It was an unusual forearm tattoo that the police said led them to Luis Reyes …
Matt Taibbi / TK News:
Moral Majority Media Strikes Again  —  When Rachel Maddow, Rolling Stone, and others jumped on a dubious report of ivermectin overdoses, it was just the latest in a string of moral mania mishaps  —  Citing a report of Oklahoma emergency rooms so overwhelmed by ivermectin overdoses …
Glenn H. Reynolds / New York Post:
US troops' rage at their leaders will grow unless there's deep reform  —  Our military's civilian leadership is corrupt and incompetent.  The brass commands respect neither among the citizenry nor the forces it commands.  Mid-level officers are in a rage — a dangerous phenomenon …
Charles P. Pierce / Esquire:
An Incredible Exercise in Public Hypocrisy Is Unfolding Right on Schedule  —  The world's most predictable exercise in public hypocrisy is unfolding right on schedule.  After spending a couple of weeks belaboring the administration over how it allegedly left our Afghan allies behind …
Jonathan Tamari / The Philadelphia Inquirer:
Sean Parnell's wife sought protective orders against him.  A rival says that's ‘disqualifying.’  —  Pennsylvania Republican Senate candidate Jeff Bartos launched a charged personal attack against a leading GOP opponent Tuesday, arguing that Sean Parnell is “unelectable” …
Discussion: Raw Story
Alex Thompson / Politico:
Biden anxiety levels  —  Presented by The American Petroleum Institute (API)  —  Welcome to POLITICO's West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration.  With Allie Bice  —  JOE BIDEN often thinks he's his own best messenger.
Discussion: RedState and Washington Examiner
Washington Post:
Election officials need our legal help against repressive laws and personal threats  —  Bob Bauer served as White House counsel during the Obama administration and is a professor at the New York University School of Law.  Benjamin L. Ginsberg practiced election law for 38 years representing …
Discussion: Balloon Juice
Alex Thompson / Politico:
The CIA's least covert mission  —  In the bowels of its Langley headquarters, a fluorescent-lit, mundane office space houses a team of about a dozen people engaged in what is perhaps the Central Intelligence Agency's least covert mission: to make American citizens “like” the agency on social media.
Elizabeth Stuart / CNN:
13 Miami-Dade school employees have died of Covid-19 since mid-August  —  (CNN)Thirteen school employees from Miami-Dade County Public Schools have died from Covid-19 since August 16, the school district and local teacher union told CNN on Tuesday.  —  Among the 13 were four teachers …
Discussion: The Hill
Kelly Weill / The Daily Beast:
GOP Election Truthers Tap a Failed Politician and Conspiracy Theorist for Sham Audit  —  Shiva Ayyadurai is no stranger to baseless claims of election fraud—or to conspiracy theories.  —  A two-time failed congressional candidate who has defended using the n-word and spouted COVID-19 conspiracy theories …
Discussion: Raw Story
Garrett Epps / Washington Monthly:
Why Should the Anti-Abortion Movement Settle for Just Ending Roe?  —  Two eminent philosophers, disguised as bad historians, show SCOTUS a path to a 50-state abortion ban.  —  Anyone who rides horses recognizes the moment when, at the end of a ride, a tired horse spots the barn.
Discussion: Politico
Nicholas Wu / Politico:
Encryption poised to hamper Jan. 6 investigators' phone records push  —  The congressional panel investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection could soon face an obstacle familiar to law enforcement: the popularity of encrypted communications.  —  The committee dramatically escalated its inquiry last week …
Discussion: Raw Story
Tal Axelrod / The Hill:
Trump schedules rallies in Iowa, Georgia  —  Former President Trump will barnstorm Iowa and Georgia in the coming weeks as he looks to maintain his tight grip on the GOP base.  —  Trump's leadership PAC, Save America, announced Tuesday evening that Trump will appear in Perry, Ga., on Sept. 25 and then in Des Moines on Oct. 9.
Bill Ruthhart / Chicago Tribune:
Former U.S. Sen. Adlai Stevenson III dies at 90  —  Former U.S. Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson III, the fourth generation of an iconic Illinois Democratic political family to hold public office and who lost the closest governor's race in state history, died Monday in his Chicago home.  He was 90.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Clive Irving / The Daily Beast:
How Roger Ailes Turned Post-9/11 Islamophobia Into Murdoch Profits
Discussion: Raw Story
Wall Street Journal:
Fall's Economic Comeback Turns Into a September Slowdown
Axios:
NRCC dumps NYC retreat, adds Trump headliner
Discussion: Political Wire
Natalie Prieb / The Hill:
Wisconsin Democratic Senate candidate facing 4 felony charges
Jules Gleeson / The Guardian:
Judith Butler: ‘We need to rethink the category of woman’
Carol Rosenberg / New York Times:
Proceedings in 9/11 Case Resume, and Then Are Delayed Again
Discussion: Washington Examiner and ABC News
Ashley Parker / Washington Post:
Amid political storms, Biden turns to natural disasters to project competence, compassion: 'Thank God you're safe'
Discussion: Political Wire and Fox News
 Earlier Items: 
Washington Post:
Former Trump adviser Jason Miller briefly detained in Brazil as political tumult grips country
Tina Reed / Axios:
Poll: School mask mandate fight goes beyond battleground states
Discussion: Forbes and The Hill
Freddie deBoer:
All White Men Are White Men  —  If “white men” does not mean white men, how can “white men” hurt white men?
Discussion: National Review