by Frank James
A quick guided tour of some of the morning's most important, most interesting, or both, Washington-related stories.
The Pakistan crisis worsened as security forces beat and arrested lawyers protesting President Pervez Musharraf's imposition of emergency rule and his firing of the supreme court's chief justice.
Responding to consumer worries over the safety of imported food and products, the White House is expected to announce a package of regulatory agency reforms that it said would strengthen the federal government's oversight of such products by emphasizing prevention but critics said the Bush Administration's planned changes didn't go far enough.
Fearing the possibility of a pervasive structural flaw, the Air Force grounded its entire fleet of 688 F-15 fighters, the service's premiere front-line fighter, after a jet deteriorated in flight over Missouri although not before the pilot was able to eject safely.
President Bush offered visiting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan more intelligence-sharing and high-level contacts between the U.S. and Turkey's military as the U.S. tried to keep that ally from invading northern Iraq to chase down Kurdish rebels.
Americans are split over how to deal with the perceived Iranian threat with 46 percent saying military action should be taken immediately or if diplomacy fails while 45 percent oppose such an action.
House members are expected today to overwhelmingly override President Bush's veto of popular water-resources legislation, with Democrats hoping the action will change the dynamics in Congress enough to lead to other overrides and a further diminishing of Bush's remaining political power.
Some illegal immigrants and criminals trying to cross the border are burning their fingertips in an effort to obliterate their fingerprints to confound the biometric screening conducted by U.S. border security.
Presidential candidate John Edwards's has traded sweet-natured optimism for an angrier, more aggressive campaign-style as he tries to cut into Sen. Hillary Clinton's lead in polls by arguing that she is unelectable while he is, and generally ignoring Sen. Barack Obama.
The race for the Republican party presidential nomination appears wide open not only generally but within the Bush family too, with the neither President Bush, his father or brother Jeb, the former Florida governor, expressing a preference though other members of the family are supporting Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson.







Comments
In news the Swamp hasn't mentioned, CNN is reporting that Obama supporters in South Carolina pressured the state Democratic Party to keep comedian Steve Colbert off the primary ballot. See http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/11/06/obama.colbert/
The actions of Obama's people don't exactly fit in with all the "new tone" "bringing us together" rhetoric St. Barack is spewing.
Posted by: Bruce | November 6, 2007 1:55 PM
In yet more news the Swamp won't mention, ABC News is reporting that a treasure trove of Clinton papers at the U. of AR won't be made public until 2009--after the presidential election. See
http://www.abcnews.go.com/print?id=3825609
This on top of the "hold" Bill and Hillary have placed on the Clinton papers at the Clinton Library.
Posted by: Bruce | November 6, 2007 2:14 PM
US Supreme Court to former Governor George Ryan:
Go to jail. Go directly to jail. Do not pass go, and most certainly do not collect $200.
Posted by: pat | November 6, 2007 3:29 PM
In news that Bruce won't mention, Bush is not beating President Nixon in disapproval ratings:
Meanwhile, Bush reached an unwelcome record. By 64%-31%, Americans disapprove of the job he is doing. For the first time in the history of the Gallup Poll, 50% say they "strongly disapprove" of the president. Richard Nixon had reached the previous high, 48%, just before an impeachment inquiry was launched in 1974.
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20071106/a_iranpoll06.art.htm
Posted by: BC | November 6, 2007 10:43 PM