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When Trent Lott resigned as Senate Republican leader, several political observers attributed his downfall to the criticism leveled at him through a hitherto little-noticed medium: Web logs, or, as they are more commonly called, blogs.
These journal-like Web sites have become the virtual soapboxes of political pundits such as Andrew Sullivan, former New Republic editor, and Joshua Micah Marshall, who writes for “Washington Monthly” and “The Hill.”
Prominent among the bloggers credited with forcing Lott to resign is Glenn Reynolds, law professor at the University of Tennessee, who comments on current events through his blog, appropriately named Insta-Pundit, www.instapundit.com. Reynolds has written two books and contributed op-eds to national newspapers, but it is his blog, more than anything, that has put him in the limelight.
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