Today’s edition of quick hits.
* The White House censure resolutions were officially unveiled today: “U.S. Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) and U.S. Representative Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) have introduced two censure resolutions in their respective chambers condemning the president, vice president and the attorney general for misconduct regarding our military involvement in Iraq and for their repeated assaults on the rule of law at home. Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) is a cosponsor of both Senate censure resolutions and Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) is a cosponsor of the Senate censure resolution regarding Iraq. The House resolutions have 19 original cosponsors.”
* Here’s a good one from Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington: “Today, CREW filed a complaint with the Department of Justice asking that the Counterespionage Section of the National Security Division initiate an investigation into whether House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-OH) violated the law by leaking classified information…. In a July 31, 2007 interview with Fox News anchor Neil Cavuto, Rep. Boehner disclosed an aspect of a Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court’s decision regarding warrantless wiretapping.”
* NYT: “One part of the Justice Department mess that requires more scrutiny is the growing evidence that the department may have singled out people for criminal prosecution to help Republicans win elections. The House Judiciary Committee has begun investigating several cases that raise serious questions. The panel should determine what role politics played in all of them.”
* Roll Call: “An investigative subcommittee of the House ethics committee unanimously agreed to suspend its two-month-long investigation into indicted Rep. William Jefferson (D-La.) after the Justice Department expressed concerns that the panel’s inquiry would interfere with the FBI’s ongoing criminal investigation.”
* LA Times reporter admits that he obsesses over Drudge links: “Every day, journalists and media executives in newsrooms across the land hope they’ll have something that catches Drudge’s fancy — or, as he has put it, ‘raises my whiskers.’ Most keep their fingers crossed that he’ll discover their articles on his own and link to them. Others are more proactive, sending anonymous e-mails or placing calls to him or his behind-the-scenes assistant.”
* McClatchy’s Steven Thomma, explaining how and why the Democratic Party is more liberal now than at any point in a generation, said, “It’s more antiwar than at any time since 1972.” I don’t want to dwell on one nine-word sentence, but I’d quibble with the assertion. I don’t think Dems are anti-war; I think they’re opposed to dumb wars. It’s not a reflexive pacifism.
* The NYT ran an entire column today on the hassles involved with buying a cup of coffee. I don’t know why.
* MSNBC ran an on-air feature today asking, “How hot is too hot for a candidates spouse?” This, after painfully absurd coverage of Hillary Clinton’s cleavage last week.
* As of today, there are now 131 supporters in the House for a repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” That’s actually pretty good.
* Does the White House still have confidence in Maliki? Today, the State Department hedged. Hmm.
* The Huffington Post unveiled a new feature, Fundrace, that makes it easy to see who’s funding the 2008 presidential campaign. Cool.
* Congressional earmarks have dropped from 16,500 in 2005 to 6,500 now. That’s not bad, but apparently new disclosure rules are backfiring.
* White House spokesperson Dana Perino blasted Dems on Fox News for trying to politicize the Minneapolis bridge collapse. She explained, “You know, literally an hour after the bridge collapsed you had Democrats in Congress making such accusations while people are still underwater needing to be rescued. And I think it is reprehensible … And I have to also remind you, when you look at those highway bills and the billions upon billions that American taxpayers are spending, it’s congressional earmarks that take up a lot of that money, and believe me that money is not going to fund maintenance of bridges.” I don’t think she appreciated the irony.
* And finally, Slate stumbled onto what turned out to be the political story of the day: “There’s one vote that Rudy Giuliani definitely can’t count on in his 2008 presidential bid: his own daughter’s. According to the 17-year-old Caroline Giuliani’s Facebook profile, she’s supporting Barack Obama.”
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.