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10:10 AM ET, May 13, 2010

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Bloomberg:
Kagan Was ‘Not Sympathetic’ as Law Clerk to Gun-Rights Argument  —  Elena Kagan said as a U.S. Supreme Court law clerk in 1987 that she was “not sympathetic” toward a man who contended that his constitutional rights were violated when he was convicted for carrying an unlicensed pistol.
Discussion: Shot in the Dark and Pajamas Media
RELATED:
Byron York / Washington Examiner:
Questions surround Kagan's handling of White House eco-terrorist controversy  —  In 1995 and 1996, future Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan was involved in a bizarre controversy in which the Clinton White House was accused of siding with an eco-terrorist group locked in a standoff with federal agents deep in the woods of Oregon.
Charlie Savage / New York Times:
Finding Meaning in Kagan's Tie to Justice Marshall  —  WASHINGTON — In the spring of 1988, Justice Thurgood Marshall assigned a clerk, Elena Kagan, to write a first draft of his opinion in a case considering whether a school district could charge a poor family for busing a child to the nearest school, which was 16 miles away.
Wall Street Journal:
Voters Shifting to GOP  —  Republicans have solidified support among voters who had drifted from the party in recent elections, putting the GOP in position for a strong comeback in November's mid-term campaign, according to a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll.
RELATED:
Mark Murray / msnbc.com:
Poll: Despite spill, support for oil drilling high  —  Majority of Americans also back Ariz.'s new controversial immigration law  —  President Barack Obama's overall approval rating sits at 50 percent, a two-point increase from March.  —  BP aims to stop oil leak with smaller dome
Catherine Rampell / New York Times:
The New Poor: The Economy Shifts, Leaving Some Behind  —  JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Many of the jobs lost during the recession are not coming back.  —  Period.  —  For the last two years, the weak economy has provided an opportunity for employers to do what they would have done anyway …
Phil Willon / Los Angeles Times:
L.A. council bans most official travel to Arizona  —  Members, arguing that the new immigration law could lead to racial profiling, also vote to bar future city contracts with companies in that state.  —  Councilman Ed Reyes meets with supporters after the council voted to ban most city travel …
RELATED:
Louise Story / New York Times:
Cuomo Is Said to Question Banks' Influence on Ratings  —  The New York attorney general has started an investigation of eight banks to determine whether they provided misleading information to rating agencies in order to inflate the grades of certain mortgage securities, according to two people with knowledge of the investigation.
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
Prosecutors' Probe of Wall Street Widens
Amy Gardner / Washington Post:
In Kentucky's Senate race, ties to Mitch McConnell could be helpful or harmful  —  MONTICELLO, KY. — When Senate candidate Rand Paul told a lunchtime crowd at Shearer's Buffet that “we have to do things differently” in Washington and “bring 'em home and send some different Republicans,” …
RELATED:
Joe Arnold / WHAS:
Rand Paul coasting in new poll
McClatchy Washington Bureau:
Oil spill: BP had wrong diagram to close blowout preventer  —  WASHINGTON — In the days after an oil well spun out of control in the Gulf of Mexico, BP engineers tried to activate a huge piece of underwater safety equipment but failed because the device had been so altered that diagrams BP got …
RELATED:
Jim Davenport / Associated Press:
SC Gov. Sanford saw Argentine lover in Florida  —  COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford said Wednesday he spent last weekend in Florida with his Argentine lover, hoping to rekindle the affair that wrecked his marriage and his political future and brought a formal rebuke from legislators for embarrassing the state.
Ezra Klein:
Galbraith: The danger posed by the deficit ‘is zero’  —  James Galbraith is an economist and the Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. chair in government and business relations at the University of Texas at Austin.  He's also a skeptic of the prevailing concern over America's long-term deficit.
Daniel de Vise / College Inc.:
USNA reconsiders greasy-statue climb  —  The Herndon Climb is a signature annual event at the United States Naval Academy.  Each May, a thousand first-year midshipmen surge to the top of a 21-foot granite obelisk coated with 200 pounds of lard.  The first mid to the top plants a midshipman's cap.
Discussion: The Other McCain
Michael McAuliff / NY Daily News:
White House slashes NY anti-terrorism funds amid buzz Obama will meet with NYPD Times Square heroes  —  WASHINGTON - Eleven days after the botched plot to bomb Times Square, the Obama administration on Wednesday slashed some $53 million from the city's terror-fighting budget.
David Catanese / The Politico:
Lincoln, Halter, gear up for Arkansas runoff  —  Less than a week before their Senate primary, Sen. Blanche Lincoln and Lt. Gov. Bill Halter are preparing for their acrimonious contest to head into overtime.  —  With recent polls showing Lincoln with less than the 50 percent of the vote needed …
Discussion: The Swamp
Curtis Lum / Honolulu Advertiser:
‘Birther’ measure signed into law  —  Gov. Linda Lingle yesterday signed into law the so-called “birther” bill that is intended to limit the number of requests for President Obama's Hawai'i birth certificate.  —  Hawai'i state officials receive dozens of requests for Obama's birth certificate each month …
Discussion: Ben Smith's Blog and Right Now
Marisa Taylor / McClatchy Washington Bureau:
Criminal charges likely from Gulf oil spill, legal experts say  —  WASHINGTON — Federal investigators are likely to file criminal charges against at least one of the companies involved in the Gulf of Mexico spill, raising the prospects of significantly higher penalties than a current $75 million cap …
Discussion: TPMMuckraker
Brad DeLong / Grasping Reality with Both Hands:
The Contrast in Mood Between Today and 1983  —  The most astonishing and surprising thing I find about Washington DC today is the contrast in mood between DC today and what DC was thinking a generation ago, in 1983, the last time the unemployment rate was kissing 10%.
The Politico:
Has clout become the ‘kiss of death’?  —  The back-to-back primary defeats of two powerful appropriators have sent an unmistakable message to lawmakers: The trappings of power can be a trap.  —  On Wednesday night, West Virginia Democrats eighty-sixed Rep. Alan Mollohan …
Discussion: Outside The Beltway
Gail Collins / New York Times:
The Annals of Arlen  —  “I love you, and I love Arlen Specter,” Barack Obama told a crowd in Philadelphia last fall.  If you happen to be in Pennsylvania, you can relive this incident many times a day, thanks to campaign ads that Senator Specter hopes will save his hide in next week's Democratic primary.
Wall Street Journal:
What's Happening to Faisal Shahzad?  —  The lack of a court appearance suggests prosecutors are getting information.  But they shouldn't have to improvise.  —  The Obama administration's announcement that it will seek legislative changes to Miranda warnings for terrorism suspects is a signal event.
Discussion: Jules Crittenden and Commentary
William Kristol / Weekly Standard:
Bailout Nation v. Rule of Law  —  Financial regulatory “reform” has been wending its desultory way through Congress for quite a while, and one can lose track of where things stand and what's important.  —  But there's a vote scheduled for the Senate floor today that matters.
Pew Research Center:
Broad Approval For New Arizona Immigration Law  —  Democrats Divided, But Support key Provisions  —  The public broadly supports a new Arizona law aimed at dealing with illegal immigration and the law's provisions giving police increased powers to stop and detain people who are suspected of being in the country illegally.
Attaturk / Firedoglake:
The banality of weasels  —  They could toss in more, but FoxNews and Goldline  —  Oh dear, I hope it's okay to refer to Oil Executives (and clearly my betters) with a derisive name.  But after failing to contain an oil spill by dropping something they picked up from PODS …
Discussion: CNN and Gawker
Martin Chulov / Guardian:
Iraq violence delays US withdrawal  —  Withdrawal of first large phase of combat troops likely to be delayed for at least a month due to Iraq's instability  —  The White House is likely to delay the withdrawal of the first large phase of combat troops from Iraq for at least a month …
 
 
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 More Items: 
Debbie Schlussel:
EXCLUSIVE: Miss USA Contestant is Shi'ite Muslim Hezbollah Supporter …
Discussion: The Jawa Report
Claire Bates / Daily Mail:
Jupiter loses one of its stripes and scientists are stumped as to why
Discussion: The Onion
Jonathan Allen / The Politico:
Dicks grabs for Appropriations gavel
Discussion: Power Line
Boston Globe:
Disaster unfolds slowly in the Gulf of Mexico
Scott Horton / Harper's:
Arrest of 13 CIA Agents Sought in Spain
Discussion: AMERICAblog News
mfa.gov.il:
PM Netanyahu's Jerusalem Day speech at Mercaz Harav Yeshiva
Discussion: Israel Matzav
 Earlier Items: 
Reid Wilson / Hotline On Call:
RNC Members Blast Barbour Over MA
Discussion: Beltway Confidential
ABCNEWS:
Oil Spill, Smoke Screen?  BP's Stranglehold on Underwater Leak Footage
Discussion: The Huffington Post and Daily Kos
Art Beast / The Daily Beast:
Backing Off the Tax Pledge?
Michiko Kakutani / New York Times:
Books of The Times: ‘The Promise: President Obama, Year One’ by Jonathan Alter