Today’s edition of quick hits.
* Like McCain, Maliki doesn’t care what anybody says: “Iraq’s prime minister vowed Thursday to fight ‘until the end’ against Shiite militias in Basra despite protests by tens of thousands of followers of a radical cleric in Baghdad and deadly clashes in the capital and the oil-rich south.”
* Bloodshed in Baghdad, as well as Basra: “A U.S. government employee was killed and four others were wounded in Baghdad this week by rocket attacks on the Green Zone diplomatic and government compound, the U.S. State Department said on Thursday. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the casualties occurred during four days of rocket attacks on the compound in central Baghdad beginning on Sunday.”
* Now that Al Wynn has lost his House primary, he’s cashing in: “Lame-duck Rep. Albert Wynn (D-Md.) announced Thursday afternoon that he will leave the House in June to join a Washington, D.C., law firm. Wynn, who was defeated in February in his bid for a ninth term when he lost the Democratic primary to nonprofit executive Donna Edwards, will become a partner in Dickstein Shapiro’s Public Policy & Law Practice and will focus on legal, legislative and regulatory counseling.”
* I get the impression that Speaker Pelosi is not easily intimidated: “A recent letter from several Hillary Clinton fundraisers to Nancy Pelosi seeking she step back from her contention that superdelegates should support the pledged-delegate leader appears to have had little effect on the House Speaker.”
* On a related note, MoveOn is rallying to Pelosi’s defense.
* AEY Inc., a company led by a 22-year-old with some run-ins with the law and who has no discernible experience in military procurement, somehow won a military contract to provide ammunition to Afghan security forces. Now that the ammo has turned out to be useless, no one can explain why and why this happened.
* Henry Waxman has more than a few questions about the AEY contact. (If Joe Lieberman believed in doing his job, he would be asking questions, too.)
* Would the U.S. team up with Iran in Basra? Hmm.
* Maybe, just maybe, the State Department can review how its employees and contractors access private files of high-profile Americans.
* Bring on the Siegelman hearings.
* Rebate checks are going to make the economy “stronger than ever before“? Somehow, I doubt that.
* Good idea: “Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) on Wednesday called on Attorney General Michael Mukasey to explain the decision to eliminate the public corruption unit in Los Angeles that has been investigating Rep. Jerry Lewis’s (R-Calif.) ties to a lobbying firm.”
* Too many conference calls? “The first question on today’s latest Clinton campaign conference call came from the ‘freelance humor columnist’ for the Syracuse Post-Standard. Maybe it’s time to put this whole campaign on pause for a month or so?”
* I’ll never really understand why the media is this irresponsible in its coverage of McCain: “After playing a video clip of Sen. John McCain’s March 25 speech on the housing crisis, MSNBC’s Contessa Brewer asked, ‘Is this a real turning point for him, being this specific and detailed on what the economy needs?’ Um, Contessa? He didn’t offer any specifics.
* It looks like the LA Times really got burned on that Tupac Shakur story.
* John Solomon wants everyone to know that the Washington Times will remain biased and unreliable. What a relief.
* The NYT ran a story today, on the front page, about how young people like to send and receive news links and videos to their friends. “According to interviews and recent surveys, younger voters tend to be not just consumers of news and current events but conduits as well — sending out e-mailed links and videos to friends and their social networks. And in turn, they rely on friends and online connections for news to come to them.” You don’t say.
* And finally, another day, another series of frustrating server problems. Everything was going along smoothly until yesterday, wasn’t it? I’m sorry for the inconvenience; we’ll get this straightened out just as soon as possible.
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.