Essential Reads
Essential Reads is your one-stop source for the top stories of the day as reported by your favorite Washington Week panelists. It's a simple way to save time and stay informed about the news you need to know. Check it out every day!
Oct 19, 2011
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Staying in Vegas? The Hermanator Doesn't Make the Grade
By Beth Reinhard, National JournalFaced with making a giant leap from novelty act to political statesman -- in Las Vegas, of all places -- surging Republican candidate Herman Cain predictably fell short in Tuesday’s debate.
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Obama Finds Economy Makes Policies a Hard Sell on Bus Tour
By Julianna Goldman, BloombergLisa Hensley was thrilled when President Barack Obama unexpectedly showed up during the lunch hour at the Countryside Barbeque in Marion, North Carolina, a town of about 8,000 along the Blue Ridge Mountains.
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A Fierce Clash for Romney and Perry as Republican Candidates Debate
By Jeff Zeleny and Jim Rutenberg, New York TimesMitt Romney came under intensive attack from his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination at a debate here Tuesday night, with a newly assertive Rick Perry leading a sometimes personal barrage against him on conservative consistency, health care policy and even the immigration status of yard workers at his home.
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Republican presidential debate puts Herman Cain to test
By Karen Tumulty, Washington POstThe near-weekly ritual of Republican presidential debates took a raucous turn Tuesday night as the unsettled field of candidates ganged up on one another in a series of attacks more intense and personal than any in their previous appearances together.
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After sharp GOP debate, campaign shifts focus
By Dan Balz, Washington PostAfter five debates in six weeks, the race for the Republican presidential nomination will soon shift to a new phase, one focused on states with early primaries and caucuses and dominated by retail campaign skills and television commercials rather than by prepared sound bites and testy exchanges on a debate stage.
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Fightin' Words: Rick Perry and Mitt Romney duke it out at the presidential debate in Las Vegas.
by John Dickerson, SlateIn order to give the CNN Western Republican Presidential Debate a regional flair, the network created a horseshoe logo. The candidates went one better. They turned the debate into a Wild West bar fight. It started with a scuffle over Herman Cain’s 9-9-9 tax plan, then tipped over tables in a skirmish over Mitt Romney’s health care plan in Massachusetts. The candidates talked over each other, their voices escalating. They accused each other of lying. At one testy point, when Romney was lecturing Rick Perry about interrupting, he put his hand on the Texas governor’s shoulder. He was trying to provoke him. Watch it, Mitt—he could be packing.
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Oct 18, 2011
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Street Cred: Why Herman Cain keeps trying to say Mitt Romney is Wall Street’s candidate.
by John Dickerson, SlateMitt Romney can claim a lot of geography. He was born in Michigan, was governor of Massachusetts, worked and lived in Utah, and has a summer place in New Hampshire. Oh, and he’s said to be building in San Diego.
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Hillary Clinton Visits Libya to Meet Rebel Leaders
With Martha Raddatz, ABC NewsSecretary of State Hillary Clinton touched down in Libya Tuesday afternoon, becoming the first cabinet level official to visit the country since NATO airstrikes began in March and Tripoli fell in late August.
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Hillary Clinton Visits Libya to Meet Rebel Leaders
by Martha Raddatz, ABC NewsSecretary of State Hillary Clinton touched down in Libya Tuesday afternoon, becoming the first cabinet level official to visit the country since NATO airstrikes began in March and Tripoli fell in late August.
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Street Cred: Why Herman Cain keeps trying to say Mitt Romney is Wall Street’s candidate.
by John Dickerson, Slate MagazineMitt Romney can claim a lot of geography. He was born in Michigan, was governor of Massachusetts, worked and lived in Utah, and has a summer place in New Hampshire. Oh, and he’s said to be building in San Diego.
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GOP debates become key providing ground
by Dan Balz, The Washington PostThe battle for the Republican presidential nomination always moves first through Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and lately Nevada. But before the 2012 candidates ever get to those states, they have been forced to run through an unexpectedly significant proving ground: nationally televised debates.
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Miss Nevada outshines Romney
by Amy Gardner and Karen Tumulty, The Washington PostMitt Romney wasn’t the big star at a campaign rally under a blazing Nevada sun at an office park a few miles off the Las Vegas strip. Tim Pawlenty, a former rival for the Republican presidential nomination who has endorsed Romney and is with this week in Nevada, wasn’t really the star either.
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Republican Debate: Five Things to Watch
by Nia Malika-Henderson, The Washington PostIf it seems like it was just a week ago that eight Republican presidential candidates sat around a table for a debate, that’s because it was just a week ago. But with tonight’s CNN/Western Republican Leadership Conference debate, which starts at 8 pm EST, the iron-man-like gauntlet of back-to-back fall debates ends and the candidates won’t have face-to-face meetings until next month. So tonight, the candidates will have two hours to make an impression and land a punch, before another round of debates begins.
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A Front-Runner, but the Race Is Long
by Jeff Zeleny and Ashley Parker, The New York TimesHe has consistently outperformed the rest of the Republican presidential field in debates. He has built a powerful fund-raising machine. He has rolled out one big-name endorsement after another. He has avoided being drawn into distracting sideshows or becoming rattled by his opponents.
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Will Deficit Panel Count Savings From Waning Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan?
by Naftali Bendavid, The Wall Street JournalAs the deadline approaches for the congressional supercommittee to cut $1.2 trillion or more from the deficit, one question is whether it will count savings from winding down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Don’t look down: What if there were another Lehman?
by Greg Ip, The EconomistASKED on October 11th how he might have handled the financial crisis of 2008 differently, Mitt Romney, the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination, refused to answer “a hypothetical”. He had good reason to prevaricate. The possibility of another crisis, given the euro zone’s woes, remains; the ability of the federal government to respond has changed drastically
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Iraq War Ends With a Whimper, Not a Bang
by Yochi J. Dreazen, National JournalThe Iraq War began with Pentagon officials boasting about an initial offensive that would “shock and awe” the enemy, then-President George W. Bush flying a military plane to an aircraft carrier for a high-profile address to thousands of cheering troops, and round-the-clock coverage on the nation’s TV networks. Eight and a half grueling years later, the deeply unpopular conflict is set to end with a whimper, not a bang.
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High court to decide if it's a crime to lie about being a war hero
by Douglas Stanglan and Joan Biskupic, USA TodayThe U.S. Supreme Court is stepping into an emotionally charged dispute over a federal law that makes it a crime to lie about being a war hero.
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Police Expand Philadelphia Dungeon Case
by Pierre Thomas, ABC NewsCaptors allegedly held disabled people captive to collect government checks.
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Oct 17, 2011
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White House has "growing sense" Romeny will get GOP nod
With John Dickerson, CBS/Slate Magazine and Julianna Goldman, Bloomberg NewsDespite Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain's recent surge in popularity, the White House has identified Mitt Romney as the man to beat, according to CBS News Chief White House correspondent Norah O'Donnell. Watch video


















