Morning Constitutional – Tuesday, 29 June 2010

Good morning, folks. Steve Carell is indeed leaving The Office after next year. Now, your morning constitutional:
General Petraeus appears for confirmation hearings before the Senate Armed Services Committee today to lead the war effort in Afghanistan. His confirmation is basically assured, but questions will arise about the President’s strategy for the war.
Kagan taking questions during her confirmation hearing; seems to be getting at least a little bipartisan support on the committee; Scott Brown glowingly called her “undoubtedly a brilliant woman who has served her country in a variety of capacities.” Dahlia Lithwick at Slate on how Kagan is doing at her confirmation hearings. Republicans seem to wish they could filibuster Thurgood Marshall.
Finance reform bill in trouble; likely not enough votes to overcome a filibuster in the Senate.
Ireland adopted austerity measures two years ago, but its economic situation has only gotten worse.
David Roberts: “Republican plans to lavish the industries and technologies they favor with subsidies — which is called ‘picking winners’ when Democrats do it — are new spending that’s not paid for. They are, by definition, ‘more expensive’ than alternatives that are paid for. This is a key aspect of the climate debate on which the mainstream media has utterly dropped the ball: Democratic plans on climate and energy are not only more environmentally credible, they are more fiscally credible. Republican plans would achieve less at greater total cost to federal coffers.”
Tropical storm Alex is expected strengthen into a hurricane, but its course will likely miss the oil spill cleanup effort off the coast of Louisiana.
Iceland’s Prime Minister marries her partner after the country legalizes same-sex marriage.
A bill that would make it easier for FedEx employees to unionize is pitting FedEx against UPS on labor.
National Review endorses John McCain over J.D. Hayworth in Arizona Republican senate primary.
Sharron Angle is running for Senate and from cameras.
Three years ago, David Vitter was caught in a prostitute scandal and is now looking at being elected; how did he get away with it?
Electorlux will start making vacuum cleaners from plastic ocean trash.
Finally, new Shrek movie making Vidalia onions more popular than ever with kids. Seriously.
Related posts:
Leave a comment
Latest Tweets
- +1 http://t.co/7uzEZhIS 2012-03-09
- What kind of drunk are you getting tonight? http://t.co/FlxwgGsY #sheepedrunk 2012-03-08
- In case you don't know why everybody's joking about hugs today: http://t.co/aXgKG5xi 2012-03-08
- Climate change migration is beginning: http://t.co/AdQetwAx 2012-03-08
- More updates...
Sections
Latest Posts
- Thanks and farewell
- On a bike
- Won’t somebody please think of the members of Congress?
- Hump-Day Song of the Week: Shuffle by Bombay Bicycle Club
- The Agenda
- More on those robots that are going to destroy us all
- They (didn’t) take our jobs
- Well, maybe Mikhail Prokorov has a future in rap music
- Yo, is this racist?
- The Agenda
V+V Elsewhere
V+V Recommends
- Alas! A Blog
- alicublog
- Attackerman
- AV Club
- Cogitamus
- Ezra Klein
- FiveThirtyEight
- FlowingData
- Food Court Lunch
- Gin and Tacos
- James Fallows
- Jared Bernstein
- Lawyers, Guns and Money
- Market Urbanism
- Matt Yglesias
- Obsidian Wings
- Passion of the Weiss
- Paul Kedrosky's Infectious Greed
- Planet Money
- Political Animal
- RJ Eskow
- Sadly, No!
- Slacktivist
- Smitten Kitchen
- Ta-Nehisi Coates
- The Bobblespeak Translations
- The Bugle
- The Bureau Chiefs
- The Diane Rehm Show
- The Duck of Minerva
- The Esquire Politics Blog
- thought for food
- Whiskey Fire
- Yo, Is This Racist?
Advertisements
Archives
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010





