Today’s edition of quick hits.
* Lest anyone think the deal over the stimulus package is a done deal, it’s not: “The bipartisan agreement on an economic stimulus package reached by House leaders was immediately undermined by senators intent on ensuring that their ideas get a hearing before any bill becomes law. Even before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and the chamber’s minority leader, John Boehner of Ohio, stood together yesterday on Capitol Hill to announce their agreement, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, said he planned to introduce his own bill.”
* On a related note: “Americans increasingly expect a recession this year and they’re looking to Democrats more than President George W. Bush for a solution, according to a Bloomberg/Los Angeles Times survey. The pessimism was shared widely, with more than two-thirds of those polled saying the economy is doing badly, up from 56 percent in December. That is the most negative sentiment since the poll began asking the question in 1997…. By a margin of 51 percent to 29 percent, respondents to the survey said Democrats can handle the economy better than Bush.”
* As expected, Dennis Kucinich formally ended his presidential campaign today.
* The exodus continues: “Rep. Dave Weldon (R-Fla.) is expected to announce that he will retire from Congress at the end of this session, a Republican source confirmed Friday. Weldon, 54, is a seven-term lawmaker who sits on the House Appropriations Committee. He could not be reached for comment. Weldon would be the 22nd GOP incumbent to announce that they will not seek reelection in 2008. It’s also the second GOP retirement announcement this week. On Thursday, Rep. Jim Walsh (R-N.Y.) said he would not seek reelection.”
* This McClatchy piece about immigration officials detaining and deporting American citizens is just stunning. As Michael Froomkin noted, “It’s really worth reading the whole article: no right to a lawyer, no help getting documents, no one believes the documents you get or the witnesses you find, and you have the burden of proof of showing you are a citizen — while in custody.”
* Disappointing, but not unexpected: “Attorney General Michael Mukasey today told reporters that ‘he doesn’t plan for a special prosecutor to investigate whether the CIA broke the law when it destroyed videotapes of terror interrogations, defying some in Congress who want an independent look’ at the case. ‘Speaking tersely and in an even, low tone,’ Mukasey refused to say ‘whether he has seen any evidence that destroying the interrogation tapes violated court orders or otherwise interfered with any case.'”
* In related news: “A judge on Thursday gave the Justice Department three weeks to report in writing whether the destruction of C.I.A. videotapes in November 2005 violated an order he issued four months earlier to preserve evidence. The new order, issued by Judge Richard W. Roberts of the Federal District Court in Washington, is the first to require the Bush administration to provide information related to the videotapes’ destruction, which is under criminal investigation.”
* I’ve been meaning to write more about EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson and his indefensible decision to prevent states from doing more to combat global warming. He was smacked around quite effectively yesterday, and Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) has introduced a bill to overrule Johnson’s decision.
* Anxious to understand exactly what went on in the Senate yesterday with FISA and retroactive telecom immunity, and what happens next? Paul Kiel offers a summary with the lay of the land.
* In a very pleasant surprise, union membership went up last year for the first time in a quarter-century. Good. May this please be the start of a trend.
* The Wall Street Journal was poised to make more of the paper available for free online, in the hopes that it would boost traffic and online advertising revenue. So much for that idea.
* Does Dana Perino really want to talk about “do-nothing” Congresses? If so, she hasn’t thought this one through.
* And finally, Colorado State Rep. Douglas Bruce (R) became the first state lawmaker in Colorado history to receive a formal censure from the General Assembly, following an incident in which he “delivered a swift kick to the knee of a photographer for The Rocky Mountain News who was snapping his picture during a ceremonial prayer.” Bruce, a conservative Republican, refused to apologize. “Just before he was censured, Mr. Bruce gave a speech on the House floor comparing himself to the main character in the film ‘Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,’ in which he said Jimmy Stewart plays a rookie senator who is hounded by the press until he physically attacks them. Mr. Bruce’s colleagues were unmoved. ‘You’re not Jimmy Stewart,’ responded Representative Al White, Republican of Hayden. ‘This is not a 1939 movie. This is today. Your actions were wrong.'”
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.