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1:35 PM ET, June 26, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Sally Quinn / Washington Post:
A GOP Plan To Oust Cheney  —  The big question right now among Republicans is how to remove Vice President Cheney from office.  Even before this week's blockbuster series in The Post, discontent in Republican ranks was rising.  —  As the reputed architect of the war in Iraq …
RELATED:
blog.washingtonpost.com:
A Strong Push From Back Stage  —  Air Force Two touched down at the Greenbrier Valley Airport in West Virginia on Feb. 6, 2003, carrying Vice President Cheney to the annual retreat of Republican House and Senate leaders.  He had come to sell them on the economic centerpiece of President Bush's first term: a $674 billion tax cut.
Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
The Cheese Stands Alone  —  "We'll make statements only today," President Bush announced to reporters yesterday as he sat with the Estonian president in the Oval Office.  —  No surprise there.  Vice President Cheney's recent declaration that he is not part of the executive branch …
The Hill:
Secrecy may cost Cheney, Dems warn
Discussion: Think Progress and Secrecy News
Rick Klein / Political Radar:
Bush Calls Immigration Bill "Amnesty"  —  ABC News' Rick Klein reports: President Bush has spent a whole lot of time in recent months claiming that the immigration bill isn't "amnesty."  —  But in describing the measure Tuesday morning, an apparent slip of the tongue suggested otherwise …
RELATED:
CNN:
Lugar urges Bush to change course on Iraq … WASHINGTON (CNN) — Republican support for President Bush's Iraq war policy suffered a significant crack Monday evening when Republican Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana urged the president to change course in Iraq "very soon."
Washington Times:
Rough road ahead for immigration bill  —  Barbara L. Salisbury/The Washington Times From left, Republican Sens. John Cornyn of Texas, Jeff Sessions of Alabama and Jim DeMint of South Carolina voiced their opposition to the immigration-reform bill yesterday on Capitol Hill.
David Rogers / Wall Street Journal:
Republicans Add Further Pressure On White House
Patrick O'Connor / The Politico:   House GOP set to reject immigration bill
Washington Times:
Rough road ahead for immigration bill
Discussion: Hot Air, National Review and Fox News
Michelle Malkin:
Shamnesty on the Senate Floor, Take 2 Plus: Is your senator …
James Taranto / Opinion Journal:
The Truth About Guantanamo  —  Proposals to treat detainees as criminal defendants make a mockery of international humanitarian law.  —  Was it wishful thinking?  On Thursday the Associated Press reported that, according to sources it did not name, "the Bush administration is nearing …
RELATED:
ACLU:
What You Should Know About Habeas Corpus
Discussion: The Huffington Post
Morris D. Davis / New York Times:
The Guantánamo I Know  —  LINDSEY GRAHAM, a Republican senator …
Discussion: ACLU and TalkLeft
Glenn Greenwald / Salon:
Standards of American justice under George W. Bush
Discussion: ABC News
New York Times:
Justices Loosen Ad Restrictions in Campaign Finance Law  —  The Supreme Court on Monday took a sharp turn away from campaign finance regulation, opening a wide exception to the advertising restrictions that it upheld when the McCain-Feingold law first came before it four years ago.
RELATED:
Roxana Tiron / The Hill:
Out-of-Afghanistan rumblings on the Hill  —  When they won control of Congress in November, Democrats pressed their case to withdraw troops from Iraq and refocus on Afghanistan, but some are growing impatient with U.S. operations in Afghanistan as well.  —  A few congressional Democrats …
RELATED:
Richard Cohen / Washington Post:
How the GOP Could Win  —  There are two ways to predict the winner of the 2008 presidential race: Check the polls or read some history.  The polls tell you that with George Bush's approval ratings abysmally low; with the war in Iraq becoming increasingly unpopular; with the GOP lacking a dominant candidate …
National Review:
Bad Vibe  —  Something about this immigration battle doesn't sit well.  For all the bitterness of our political battles, there's at least the sense that the government responds to the drift of public opinion.  The Republicans in Congress turned into big spenders and the war in Iraq went poorly.
Agence France Presse:
Iranian forces crossed Iraqi border: report  —  Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces have been spotted by British troops crossing the border into southern Iraq, The Sun tabloid reported on Tuesday.  —  Britain's defence ministry would not confirm or deny the report, with a spokesman declining to comment on "intelligence matters".
Sudarsan Raghavan / Washington Post:
Iraqi Youth Face Lasting Scars of War  —  Conflict's Psychological Impact on Children Is Immense, Experts Say  —  BAGHDAD — Marwa Hussein watched as gunmen stormed into her home and executed her parents.  Afterward, her uncle brought her to the Alwiya Orphanage, a high-walled compound nestled …
Walter Pincus / Washington Post:
Judge Discusses Details of Work On Secret Court  —  At 3 a.m. on Aug. 8, 1998, the day after the bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, the chief judge of a special court that supervises applications under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was awakened at home in order …
Paul Kiel / TPMmuckraker:
Cage Match: Did Griffin Try to Disenfranchise African-American Voters in 2004?  —  For years, Tim Griffin, the former aide to Karl Rove who's been at the center of the U.S. attorney controversy, has been dogged by allegations that he was a part of a 2004 scheme to block African-Americans in Florida from voting.
Christy Hardin Smith / Firedoglake:
Bending Congressional Ears  —  Back in September of 2006, around the time that the provisions gutting habeas were passed in the Senate, former Reagan Justice official Bruce Fein was interviewed on The Newshour on PBS in a discussion opposite David Rivkin, who served as the designated Bush Administration policy promoter.
 
 
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 More Items: 
National Review:
Some Good News  —  Cochran, Hatch,Tester voted against cloture...
Lisa Wade / The Huffington Post:
Why I Love Paris (Just A Very Little Bit)
Discussion: Ali Eteraz
Guardian:
From No 10 to the Middle East: Blair gets a new job
Dave Kilcullen / SWJ Blog:
Understanding Current Operations in Iraq
Discussion: BLACKFIVE and QandO
Jesse Lee / The Gavel:
Chairman Waxman Writes to White House Counsel Fielding on Security Violations
Discussion: Think Progress
Minneapolis Star Tribune:
Web chatter vows GOP convention protests
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
Arnold Kling / TCS Daily:
Wonks vs. Revolutionaries: The Biggest Division Within the Democratic Party
Discussion: Washington Monthly
Timothy Aeppel / Wall Street Journal:
Accident Raises Safety Concerns On Chinese Tires
Discussion: Daniel W. Drezner
 Earlier Items: 
White House:
President Bush Discusses Comprehensive Immigration Reform
Discussion: First Draft
Jeff Zeleny / New York Times:
Obama, in New TV Ads, Focuses on His Pre-Senate Years
Michael / Fred File:
Fred Thompson talks about Queen Elizabeth, Salman Rushdie and Monty Python
Discussion: Hot Air
Michael R. Gordon / New York Times:
For G.I.'s in Iraq, a Harrowing Day Facing a Trap
Matt Stoller / MyDD:
Book Review: A Tragic Legacy
Erica Werner / Associated Press:
Feds Contact Ex-Doolittle Aide
Thomas B. Edsall / Huffington Post:
Fred Thompson: The Philip Morris Candidate
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Cecilia Kang / New York Times:
The FCC votes 3-2 to reinstate net neutrality rules, expanding government oversight of ISPs and aiming to protect consumer access to the internet

Laura Kukkonen / Columbia Journalism Review:
After a reporter for Aamulehti, Finland's second-largest daily, acknowledged in his autobiography that he fabricated stories, the paper removes 551 articles

Aidan Ryan / The Boston Globe:
Memo: Boston public radio station WBUR CEO Margaret Low says 31 employees, or ~14% of its staff, are leaving, with 24 of them taking a voluntary buyout

 
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