Top Items:
Scott Wilson / Washington Post:
As Kyle Rittenhouse trial nears end, judge's decisions from the bench come under scrutiny — Regardless of how he is viewed, Judge Bruce E. Schroeder is indisputably a man with fixed rules for how trials in his Kenosha County courtroom will be run. Some are basic, some unorthodox …
RELATED:
Caroline Downey / National Review:
Trial Explodes: Defense Seeks Mistrial as Kyle Rittenhouse Cries on Stand, Judge Berates Prosecutor — Kyle Rittenhouse's defense attorneys said Wednesday that they will file for a mistrial with prejudice, citing constitutional violations and misconduct by the prosecution.
Discussion:
HotAir, Washington Examiner, RedState, Insider, littlegreenfootballs.com and CNN
Daniel E. Slotnik / New York Times:
After Intense Questioning, Rittenhouse Testimony Concludes — Julie BosmanReporting from the courtroom in Kenosha — As the judge again begins to argue with the prosecutor, he announces that court is breaking for one hour for lunch. — The prosecutor is pushing Kyle Rittenhouse …
Discussion:
Associated Press, Althouse and The Federalist
Julie Bosman / New York Times:
The judge, who has clashed with prosecutors, has been ‘in this business for 50 years.’ — Bruce Schroeder, the longest-serving circuit court judge in Wisconsin, is presiding over the homicide trial of Kyle Rittenhouse. — At times during Mr. Rittenhouse's testimony on Wednesday he took …
Discussion:
CNN and Rolling Stone
Jordan Williams / Associated Press:
Judge admonishes prosecutor in Rittenhouse trial
Judge admonishes prosecutor in Rittenhouse trial
Discussion:
Mediaite, The Hill, Washington Examiner, The Daily Caller, Raw Story and IJR
Free Lance-Star:
Spotsylvania School Board orders libraries to remove ‘sexually explicit’ books — The Spotsylvania County School Board has directed staff to begin removing books that contain “sexually explicit” material from library shelves and report on the number of books that have been removed at a special called meeting next week.
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Ryan J. Reilly / HuffPost:
Crying Pro-Trump Capitol Rioter Who Assaulted Cop Sentenced To 41 Months In Prison — Scott Fairlamb, whose brother is in the U.S. Secret Service, was the first Jan. 6 defendant sentenced in connection with an assault on cops. — A Donald Trump supporter from New Jersey …
Discussion:
CNBC, Balloon Juice and Walter Einenkel
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CNN:
US Capitol rioter who assaulted police officer gets 41 months in prison — (CNN)A New Jersey gym owner and former MMA fighter who punched a police officer during the January 6 riot was sentenced to 41 months in prison on Wednesday, becoming the first rioter sentenced for violence against the police during the attack.
Discussion:
Bloomberg, Associated Press, Politico, BuzzFeed News, KNSD-TV, Al Jazeera, Forbes, USA Today, Raw Story, CBS News, New York Times, ABC17NEWS, Mediaite and Mother Jones
Joe Atmonavage / New Jersey Online:
N.J. man who punched cop during Capitol riot has raised over $30K since his arrest
N.J. man who punched cop during Capitol riot has raised over $30K since his arrest
Discussion:
Law & Crime and www.wnyc.org
Glenn Kessler / Washington Post:
Robert Moses and the saga of the racist parkway bridges — “I'm still surprised that some people were surprised when I pointed to the fact that if a highway was built for the purpose of dividing a White and a Black neighborhood or if an underpass was constructed such that a bus carrying mostly Black …
Discussion:
New York Post, Townhall, Power Line, National Review, The Daily Caller and Insider
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FiveThirtyEight:
Why White Voters With Racist Views Often Still Support Black Republicans — Can white voters who back a Black candidate still hold racist beliefs and views? — That question has come to the fore in the wake of Glenn Youngkin's gubernatorial victory in the blueish state of Virginia.
Discussion:
Twitchy
Financial Times:
US government debt sells off sharply on inflation surge — Lacklustre auction of 30-year Treasury bonds leads to jump in yield — US government bonds sold off sharply on Wednesday after the labour department reported consumer prices soared last month, intensifying concerns the Federal Reserve …
Discussion:
The Balance, National Review and Marginal REVOLUTION
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Nilay Patel / The Verge:
Updating The Verge's background policy — On ‘on background’ — The main way this happens is that big companies take advantage of a particular agreement in the media called “background.” Being “on background” means that they tell things to reporters, but those reporters agree …
Discussion:
Nieman Lab, more at Mediagazer »
Philip Mousavizadeh / Yale Daily News:
A “proliferation of administrators”: faculty reflect on two decades of rapid expansion — Over the last two decades, the number of managerial and professional staff that Yale employs has risen three times faster than the undergraduate student body, according to University financial reports.
Discussion:
National Review
Ken Dilanian / NBC News:
Domestic extremists pushing violence against Congress, school and health officials, DHS bulletin says — WASHINGTON — Domestic extremists continue to exploit false narratives to promote violence online, calling for attacks on members of Congress, public health and school officials …
Discussion:
The Gateway Pundit
RELATED:
Brian Lopez / The Texas Tribune:
Texas schools can again set their own face mask rules after federal judge overrules Gov. Greg Abbott's ban — The judge said the governor's order impedes children with disabilities from the benefits of public schools' programs, services and activities, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Discussion:
Raw Story and Off the Kuff
Los Angeles Times:
USC gave Rep. Karen Bass a full scholarship worth $95,000 while she served in Congress — During Rep. Karen Bass' first year in Congress in 2011, she contacted government ethics officials with a request: Could she accept a full scholarship for a graduate degree at USC.
Discussion:
The Hill
New York Times:
Ozy Media Faces Federal Investigations — The Justice Department and the S.E.C. have contacted companies that discussed investing in the Silicon Valley media business. — The Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission have opened investigations into the embattled Silicon …
Discussion:
Forbes and Mediaite, more at Mediagazer »
Charlie Savage / New York Times:
Swift Ruling Tests Trump's Tactic of Running Out the Clock — The former president has leveraged the slow judicial process in the past to thwart congressional oversight, but the Jan. 6 case may be different. — WASHINGTON — On the surface, a judge's ruling on Tuesday night that Congress …
Discussion:
Washington Post, USA Today, New York Sun and Raw Story
Mary L Trump / The Good in Us:
Welcome to THE GOOD IN US — In which we come together to save American democracy, or at least have fun while trying. — “The gods are strange. It is not our vices only they make instruments to scourge us. They bring us to ruin through what in us is good, gentle, human, loving.”
CNN:
Exclusive: January 6 committee interested in at least 5 people from Pence's inner circle — Washington (CNN)The House select committee investigating January 6 is interested in gathering information from at least five members of former Vice President Mike Pence's inner circle, according to three sources familiar with the effort.
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo, Raw Story and TheBlaze
Whitney Vasquez / RADAR:
Don Lemon's Lawyer Puts Megyn Kelly On Notice, Fires Off Legal Letter Trashing Conservative Host For Her ‘Reckless’ Reporting Over ‘Fabricated’ Sexual Assault — Don Lemon's attorney is going for Megyn Kelly's jugular, calling out the conservative host for her “lopsided” and “reckless” journalistic ethics.
Discussion:
The Daily Wire, RedState, BizPac Review, Ace of Spades HQ and Nicki Swift
Paul Farhi / Washington Post:
How the media missed a New Jersey senate candidate's racist social media posts — until he'd already won. — Edward Durr was such a long-shot candidate in his New Jersey state senate race that no one seemed to notice something rather striking about him: He had a history of posting bigoted …
James Hohmann / Washington Post:
The Democrats need to go back to school — A week after Republicans won the Virginia governor's race, it is increasingly obvious that Fox News and red Twitter did not invent parental anger about what's been happening in public schools. Nor is frustration limited to the suburbs — or peculiar to the Old Dominion.
Discussion:
Washington Examiner, National Review and ABC7
Catie Edmondson / New York Times:
House Republicans Who Backed Infrastructure Bill Face Vicious Backlash — The 13 Republican lawmakers who broke with their party to support a $1 trillion bipartisan public works bill have drawn anger and threats from their colleagues and constituents. — WASHINGTON — One caller instructed …
Discussion:
Washington Examiner, CNBC, Fox Business, The Hill, Insider, Raw Story, HillReporter.com, The Daily Caller and The Guardian
Vicky Prodeline / Monmouth University Polling …:
Biden's Plans More Popular Than President — Message may matter more than substance in the end — West Long Branch, NJ - President Joe Biden's big spending plans on infrastructure, support programs, and climate change remain broadly popular even though he personally does not.
Discussion:
Washington Post, Daily Kos, Insider and Political Wire
Eddie Burkhalter / Alabama Political Reporter:
Britt Campaign Internal Polling Puts Her Ahead Of Mo Brooks In Senate Race — After hearing more information about candidates, Brooks dropped to third, according to the polling company. — Katie Britt's campaign on Tuesday said an internal poll puts Britt ahead of U.S. Rep Mo Brooks …
Discussion:
Washington Examiner
Robin Walker / The Hill:
Shoot down this new military entitlement — Yet another dangerous entitlement expansion could be coming soon. On Nov. 10, the House Agriculture Committee will discuss a bill that would put significantly more members of the armed forces on food stamps, weakening the military in numerous ways.
Discussion:
HotAir
Lydia Saad / Gallup:
Local Crime Deemed Worse This Year by Americans — WASHINGTON, D.C. — Americans' perception that crime in their local area is getting worse has surged over the past year. Fifty-one percent, up from 38% in 2020, say there is more crime in their area than a year ago.
Jennifer Rubin / Washington Post:
Businesses should deliver on their promises to stand up for voting rights — The Business Roundtable sent out a self-congratulatory statement on Tuesday, praising its member companies for “stepping up our efforts to address the inequities and injustices that exist within our society's systems.”
Kavya Balaraman / Utility Dive:
California should revisit shutting down Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, Stanford, MIT analysis finds — Dive Brief: — California could reduce its power sector emissions by more than 10% from 2017 levels, save $2.6 billion in power system costs and improve system reliability by delaying …
Adam Wren / Insider:
The DNC chair is feuding with his own White House-installed lieutenants — Chair Jaime Harrison is being locked out of staffing and operational decisions, sources tell Insider. — The conflict centers on Harrison and two top DNC officials: Sam Cornale and Mary Beth Cahill.
Discussion:
Politico
NBC News:
GOP recruitment struggles give Democrats hope in 2022 Senate fight — WASHINGTON — They lost the governor's race in Virginia. They had a bad scare in New Jersey. They're the clear underdogs in the battle for the U.S. House. But Democrats saw glimmers of hope in the fight for the Senate …
Discussion:
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Daily Kos, CNN, The Hill, POLITICUSUSA and Raw Story
Judy Kurtz / The Hill:
McConaughey comes out against vaccine mandates for kids — Matthew McConaughey says that while he's received his COVID-19 shot, he's against mandating that his children get vaccinated. — “I couldn't mandate having to vaccinate the younger kids. I still want to find out more information …
Discussion:
YouTube, Whiskey Riff, Insider, The Western Journal, Louder With Crowder, CBS Dallas / Fort Worth, Breitbart, CNN, Twitchy, Washington Examiner and TheBlaze
Robert Mackey / The Intercept:
A Right-Wing Brawler Asked a Court to Protect Him From an Antifascist's Tweets … For two months now, the animosity between right-wing activists and left-wing antifascists, which regularly leads to violence at street protests, has played out in a setting where physical combat is not allowed …