THE NEW YORK TIMES
Benghazi and Arab spring rear up in U.S. Campaign.
When people here talk about American politics, many look to the sky, where the buzz of surveillance drones has grown heavy since last month’s deadly assault on the United States mission in this city in eastern Libya.
- ‘Worried sick’: Meningitis risk haunts 14,000.
- Candidates face hard choices on Afghanistan.
- A prairie liberal, trounced but never silenced.
- Fresh Windows, but where’s the start button?
THE WASHINGTON POST
Jordan thwarts Amman attacks.
Authorities in Jordan have disrupted a major terrorist plot by al-Qaeda-linked operatives to launch near-simultaneous attacks on multiple civilian and government targets, reportedly including the U.S. Embassy in the capital, Amman, Western and Middle Eastern officials said Sunday.
- Suddenly, close race on foreign policy.
- GM’s alive. Obama’s hopes here may not be.
- A landslide defeat – and a lasting mark.
- A Catch-22 for Internet-freedom tools.
LOS ANGELES TIMESGas market’s structure hits drivers hard.
In California, oil firms operate what amounts to a legal oligopoly, which is likely to contribute to big Price jumps in the future.
- A cross brings a lot to bear.
- War, peace and the swing vote.
- The illicit pipeline to Iran.
- Nixon opponent was a liberal titan.
EL PAÍS
El desplome socialista da aliento a Rajoy e impulsa el soberanismo en Euskadi.
Mayoría absoluta del PP en Galicia; mayoría relativa del PNV en Euskadi y hundimiento de los socialistas en las dos comunidades.