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5:15 PM ET, May 17, 2006

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Tony Blankley / Washington Times:
The price of secure borders  —  I've always found that avoiding insanity is useful in life — which in American politics sometimes puts one in the minority.  As a second proposition I would argue that when in negotiations, if he with whom you are negotiating is moving in your direction, don't walk out of the room.
Carolyn Lochhead / San Francisco Chronicle:
Senate guest worker plan survives attack  —  Boxer, Alabama Republican fail to kill provision, but number of visas is reduced  —  Washington — Seldom do California's liberal Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer and Alabama's conservative Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions agree on anything.
Rick Moran / Right Wing Nut House:
LOOKING FOR MIDDLE GROUND IN THE IMMIGRATION DEBATE
PittsburghLIVE.com:
'Earthquake in Pennsylvania'  —  TRIBUNE-REVIEW  —  Angry taxpayers on Tuesday tossed out the two Republican Senate leaders who helped engineer last year's legislative pay raise, an issue that apparently cost 15 House members their jobs, too.  —  Senate President Pro Tempore Robert Jubelirer of Altoona …
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Captain Ed / Captain's Quarters:
The Victory In Primaries For Conservatives  —  Over the past week, many of us have written on the frustration felt by conservatives (especially fiscal conservatives) over the past few years.  Some believe that the only manner in which to serve notice on the GOP that it cannot take conservative votes …
Discussion: The Bullwinkle Blog
CBS News:
Bush Is Now A Lame Duck  —  CBS' Meyer: Forget November, Forget '08; President Is Done  —  (CBS) This commentary was written by CBSNews.com's Dick Meyer.  —  The great impulse of the punditocracy right now is to look at President Bush's swelling problems with the public and his party …
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New York Times:
Verizon Denies Turning Over Local Phone Data
Mark Tapscott / Tapscott's Copy Desk:
Conservative Battle Fatique?  The "What If" Issue  —  More bad news for the GOP in today's edition of The Washington Post as 56 percent of the respondents to the latest Post/ABC News survey say they prefer Democrats in control of Congress.  —  There is a distinct, though not quite as deep …
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Carl Hulse / New York Times:
G.O.P. Voters to Be Target of Radio Ads by Democrats  —  WASHINGTON, May 16 — House Democrats, trying to capitalize on conservative dissatisfaction with Republicans, are reaching out to Christian voters with radio advertisements critical of Republican proposals to overhaul Social Security.
Robert J. Samuelson / Washington Post:
Still Dodging Immigration's Truths  —  President Bush's immigration speech mostly missed the true nature of the problem.  We face two interconnected population issues.  One is aging; the other is immigration.  We aren't dealing sensibly with either, and as a result we face a future …
Hotline On Call:
Sherwood Survives  —  Rep. Don Sherwood (R-PA), his popularity weighed down by a messy extramartial affair, narrowly survived a primary challenge from a virtual unknown with a Democratic voting history.  —  With more than half of the vote counted, Sherwood led challenger Kathy Scott 56 percent to 44 percent.
Thomas B. Edsall / Washington Post:
GOP Official Faces Sentence in Phone-Jamming  —  Democratic Lines Were Blocked in 2002 as New Hampshire Elected U.S. Senator  —  In October 2002, Charles McGee, executive director of the New Hampshire Republican Party, was mailed a Democratic flier that offered Election Day rides to the polls.
Christopher Wang / Associated Press:
Dow Plunges; Nasdaq Turns Negative on Yr.  —  NEW YORK - Stocks plunged Wednesday after a stronger-than-expected rise in consumer prices intensified Wall Street's fear that interest rates will keep climbing.  The Dow Jones industrial average lost 200 points, and the Nasdaq composite index turned negative for the year.
Judith Miller / Opinion Journal:
Gadhafi's Leap of Faith  —  Libya's strongman feared appearing weak.  —  On Dec. 16, 2003, three days after Saddam Hussein was pulled from his hole near Tikrit, Robert G. Joseph, who headed counterproliferation on the White House National Security Council, flew to London for a secret meeting …
Declan McCullagh / CNET News.com:
Congress may make ISPs snoop on you  —  A prominent Republican on Capitol Hill has prepared legislation that would rewrite Internet privacy rules by requiring that logs of Americans' online activities be stored, CNET News.com has learned.  —  The proposal comes just weeks …
Discussion: NewsHog and Shakespeare's Sister
 
 
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 More Items: 
Jim Romenesko / poynter.org:
Stengel named Time managing editor
Jim Fitzgerald / Associated Press:
Handyman Gets Life in Suburban N.Y. Murder
Lowell P. Weicker Jr / Hartford Courant:
Enough Of The War - And Enough Of Lieberman
Discussion: Feministe and The Mahablog
Faiz / Think Progress:
Big Oil Launches Attack On Al Gore
Michael Siegel / The Rest of the Story:
Three Major Anti-Smoking Organizations Instructed Anti-Smoking Groups …
Discussion: Macsmind and Hit and Run
David Morgan / Reuters:
Bush agrees to review of spy program
Claudia Parsons / Reuters:
INTERVIEW-US satirist Art Spiegelman tackles Danish cartoons
Alex Tabarrok / Marginal Revolution:
Open Letter on Immigration
 Earlier Items: 
John Hawkins / Human Events:
Tackling a Handful of Immigration Myths, Misnomers and Red Herrings
Washington Post:
U.S. Secretly Backing Warlords in Somalia
Discussion: Slate and Air America Radio
Alessandra Stanley / New York Times:
At White House Briefing, Polish Replaces Testiness
Kathy Matheson / Associated Press:
Foster Quotes Eminem at Penn Graduation
Roger Clegg / Opinion Journal:
Disinvited  —  The EEOC cancels a meeting rather than listen to criticism.
Jennifer Lin / Philadelphia Inquirer:
Paris suburb names street for cop-killer Abu-Jamal