From National Review, former U.S. solicitor Ken Starr weighs in on the effort to impeach President Trump.
From FrontpageMag, leftists seems disappointed that al-Baghdadi is no longer sharing their oxygen.
From Townhall, Trump explains why he didn't inform congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal) of the raid which killed al-Baghdadi.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a look at the radical economists behind Senators Warren (D-MA) and Sanders (I-VT).
From the Washington Examiner, Trump was right to not bring Barron to the World Series game he attended.
From The Federalist, why the media are freaking out over the successful mission to kill al-Baghdadi.
From American Thinker, the public schools in Dearborn, Michigan adopt a policy of serving only halal meats.
From CNS News, former Vice President Biden would increase capital gains taxes.
From LifeZette, how the left and right differ on the topic of marriage.
From NewsBusters, according to MSNBC, the al-Baghdadi raid shows the "flaws in Trump's foreign policy".
From Canada Free Press, in the raid against al-Baghdadi, Trump gave the Democrats nothing to leak.
From CBC News, for almost 50 years, Canadians have been misspelling the name of Dettah, a village in the Northwest Territories.
From CTV News, 27 Canadian youths are banned from Parliament Hill in Ottawa after they staged a climate protest in the House of Commons.
From The Portugal News, a Portuguese TAP employee is arrested for alleged human trafficking and aiding in illegal immigration.
From RFI, an 84-year-old man is arrested for allegedly shooting two men at a mosque in Bayonne, France.
From SwissInfo, melting Alpine glaciers might make room for new reservoirs and dams for hydro-electric power.
From ANSA, a female member of the group Forza Nuova is sent to trial for wearing a T-shirt that said "Auschwitzland".
From EuroNews, former Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini's party wins in the Italian region of Umbria.
From the Malta Independent, "a number of migrants" are arrested after a new disturbance at the migrant center in Safi, Malta.
From Malta Today, the head of Malta's Muslim community is "happy and relieved" that al-Baghdadi is no longer sharing his oxygen.
From Total Croatia News, Chinese workers are working around the clock on the Pelješac bridge. (If you read Croatian, read related stories at Poslovni Dnevnik and Večerni List.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, according an Albanian politician, his country is against any territory swaps between Kosovo and Serbia.
From Ekathimerini, a parade by school children marks Greece's "Ochi Day", when the country rejected an ultimatum from Italy during World War II. (The Greek word ochi means "no".)
From the Greek Reporter, Greek resistance to the Axis powers was the longest of any country in Europe.
From Novinite, nine major Bulgarian cities elect mayors in the first round of their respective elections.
From The Sofia Globe, according to Bulgarian prosecutors, the first secretary of the Russian embassy in Sofia committed espionage.
From Radio Bulgaria, some developments in the Balkans.
From Romania-Insider, a Romanian court bans the hunting of skylarks and three other species of bird.
From Russia Today, Russian President Putin orders criminal prosecution for online drug propaganda.
From Sputnik International, a former head of Russian intelligence calls Swedish teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg "our ally".
From The Moscow Times, Bulgaria asks Russia to recall its diplomat over a spying allegation.
From Daily News Hungary, the prime ministers of Hungary and Slovenia discuss migration and to Africa.
From Hungary Today, according to Hungarian President János Áder, Hungary and Cambodia will open embassies in each other's capitals.
From The Slovak Spectator, what U.K. citizens in Slovakia need to know as Brexit approaches.
From Radio Prague, today, Czechs celebrate Czechoslovakia's Independence Day.
From Radio Poland, a group of Polish investigators in Russia start re-examining the wreckage of a plane crash that killed Poland's president and 95 others in 2010.
From Deutsche Welle, some information on Germany's "far-right" party, the AfD.
From Free West Media, three men allegedly handle a submachine gun on a tram in Karlsruhe, Germany. (If you read German, read the story at PolitikStube.)
From the NL Times, when riding a bike at night in the Netherlands, please turn on its lights.
From the Express, the U.K. House of Commons rejects Prime Minister Johnson's call for a general election.
From the Evening Standard, the campaign to have a "People's Vote" undergoes some internal conflict.
From the Independent, please spare us former Prime Minister May's tears over Brexit.
From the Irish Examiner, the car of a Sinn Féin politician is burned at his home.
From The Conservative Woman, Greta Thunberg "joins the beetles". (This story has nothing to do with Paul McCartney or Ringo Starr, but is about a certain kind of insect.)
From Snouts in the Trough, how to destroy a civilization in ten steps.
From The Stream, Jezebel is really big in the news these days.
From the Daily Caller, Facebook flags a doctored video showing Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) praising the Green New Deal.
From NumbersUSA, the DHS gives about 200,000 El Salvadorians living temporarily in the U.S. one more year to leave.
From Accuracy in Media, NBC News tries to assess Trump's chances of reelection by analyzing airports.
From the New York Post, police in New York City arrest a second suspect in connection with an assault in which a woman's face was fractured.
And from The Babylon Bee, the Washington Nationals are disappointed to learn that boos at President Trump don't count as runs.
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