
One reason for the blue eyes in Bassets may be down to the white spotting pattern they have.
From reading this:
http://homepage.usask.ca/~schmutz/Bassets.htmlit seems that Bassets have two different genes causing white markings - Irish Spotting (for low-level white) and Piebald for dogs with more white.
It is widely known in other species that white spotting patterns can alter the eye colour. The white turns off the pigment cells in the white areas, so if a white patch falls across an eye, it would also affect the eye colour, reducing it to blue. The dog doesn't need to actually have a white patch near the eye for this to happen.
This is also what happens when dogs with white markings are deaf - a lack of pigment in the inner ear means the hearing mechanism fails to develop properly. Not all white spotting patterns cause this, though... it is crucially timed to the migration of pigment cells from the neural crest during development in the embryo.
Border collies - non-merle- can also have blue eyes and this is almost certainly due to a similar effect, although I don't think it has yet been established what gene is responsible for white markings in BCs. I would not be surprised if it turns out to be piebald. BCs don't need a great deal of white to have blue eye/s, the dam of my Belgian/BC cross was almost all black with just a few trimmings of white on chest, belly, feet and nose yet she had one blue eye.
The feeling is that the Blue eyes in Huskies is another gene affecting eye colour, and not related to blue eyes in other breeds.