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GOOD NEWS
"In a first-of-its-kind alliance that could fundamentally
reshape the environmental movement,
20 labor unions with nearly 5 million members are joining forces" with
an umbrella group of conservationists -- the Theodore Roosevelt
Conservation Partnership -- "to put pressure on Congress and the Bush
administration."
STATE WATCH
MISSISSIPPI:
The "first lawsuit ever filed by the federal government claiming blacks
have denied whites their voting rights" begins today.
VIRGINIA:
Service members join peace activists to call for an end to the Iraq
war.
LOUISIANA:
New Orleans is facing an "unprecedented mental health crisis."
ECONOMY:
The Drum Major Institute's 2006
Injustice Index.
BLOG WATCH
THINK
PROGRESS: Video: Bush says he will send more troops to Iraq no
matter what Congress does.
JUAN
COLE: 'Orgy of bombings' over the weekend in Iraq.
THE HORSE'S
MOUTH: Greg Sargent's excellent blog has a new home.
COALITION
FOR DARFUR: Ban Ki-moon's first U.N. test: genocide.
DAILY GRILL
"Years of pursuing stability to promote peace had left us with neither.
So we changed our policies, and committed America's influence in the
world to advancing freedom and democracy as the great alternatives to
repression and radicalism."
-- President Bush, 9/11/06,
on the danger of promoting "stability" in the Middle East
VERSUS
"[Secretary of State Condoleezza] Rice, who once lectured Egyptians on
the need to respect the rule of law, did not address those domestic
concerns. ... It was clear that the United States -- facing chaos in
Iraq, rising Iranian influence and the destabilizing
Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- had decided that stability, not
democracy, was its priority, Egyptian political commentators, political
aides and human rights advocates said."
-- New York Times, 1/16/07,
on Rice's recent visit to Egypt
ARCHIVES
Progress Report
STUDENTS
Politics with an Attitude: Everyone from Barack Obama to Stephen Colbert talks to Campus Progress. Right-wingers seem scared of us. Find out why here. |
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by Judd Legum, Faiz Shakir, Nico Pitney
Amanda Terkel and Payson Schwin
ENERGY
Giving Away The Store
Bush administration officials are ignoring the law and giving away tens
of billions of taxpayer dollars to oil companies that are already
swimming in cash. When oil companies drill on federal land and in
coastal
waters, they owe royalties to the federal government. The payments
are the country's second-largest source of income, right behind taxes.
However, the New York Times reports, "An eight-month investigation by
the Interior Department’s
chief watchdog has found pervasive
problems in the government’s program
for ensuring that companies pay the royalties they owe on billions of
dollars of oil and gas pumped on federal land and in coastal waters."
According to the report, "the agency’s data are often inaccurate,
that its officials rely too
heavily on statements by oil companies rather than actual records and
that only about 9 percent of all oil and gas leases are being
reviewed." As a result, billions of dollars that could be invested in
the
development of clean, renewable forms of energy are instead being used
to
subsidize outrageous
compensation packages for oil company executives. Interior
Department
Inspector General Earl Devaney told
Congress "Simply
stated, short of a crime, anything
goes at the highest levels of the Department of the Interior." Join
the effort to get the Bush administration to stop giving away
your money.
INTERIOR DEPARTMENT CONSPIRED TO COVER
UP PROBLEMS: A
forthcoming report by the Interior Department IG "will
allege that Interior Department officials covered up a
problem
with oil and gas leases after it was discovered in 2000, according
to
congressional aides." Also, the IG "has been
investigating whether Johnnie Burton, head of the agency that collects
royalties, might have been told about the problem earlier than she said
in congressional testimony last fall." Burton told the committee that
she first learned about the problems in 2006. She later "revised" her
testimony, acknowledging that she learned about the problems in 2005
but
didn't understand their "significance" until 2006.
OILING THE WHEELS: Did the
royalty scandal go beyond financial favors? Someone familiar with a
separate Justice Department investigation into the royalty payments
told the New York Times that "it originally had focused
on potentially improper social ties between subordinates of Gregory Smith -- director of the
royalty-in-kind program at the Minerals Management Service in Denver --
"and executives at companies vying for
contracts." The subordinates include two women, including one who is
said to be in charge of oil marketing, and a second man." The Justice
Department is also investigating whether Smith was "paid
as a consultant for oil companies hoping for contracts" while
working for the Interior Department.
FORMER INTERIOR SECRETARY CASHES IN: Gale Norton, who until recently was Bush's Secretary of the Interior --
and was ultimately responsible for overseeing the royalty program --
has taken a
high-paying position with oil giant Shell. Norton will be "general
counsel for exploration, production and unconventional resources."
GIVEAWAYS TO OIL COMPANIES DON'T
INCREASE OIL PRODUCTION: Massive giveaways to oil companies are justified by the need to spur
the domestic production of oil. As it turns out, that's not the
case. A
study by the Interior Department found that the tens of billions
in "inducements" would create "only
a tiny increase in production even if they were offered without some of the limitations now in
place." The report found the incentives "would lead to the discovery of
only 1.1 percent more reserves than if there had been no incentives at
all." The study also found that "the cost of that additional oil could
be as much
as $80 a barrel, far
more than the government would have to pay if it simply bought the oil
on its own."
IF IT'S BROKE, FIX IT: On
Thursday, the House of Representative will take up a bipartisan bill
-- The Clean Energy Act
of 2007 -- "aimed at
recouping lost royalties and stripping oil and gas companies of other tax incentives." The bill
would also "shift $13 billion into a fund to promote energy efficiency
and development of alternative and renewable energy sources." Learn
more about at the bill from our Kick the Oil
Habit campaign.
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Under the Radar
IRAQ -- BUSH SAYS HE WILL IGNORE WILL
OF CONGRESS, AMERICAN PEOPLE ON IRAQ ESCALATION PLAN: Newsweek
reports, "The
White
House was surprised when even pro-war senators, including Sam
Brownback (R-KS) and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), came out against" Bush's
plan for escalation in Iraq. U.S. News adds Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid has "lined up as
many as a dozen Republicans for a resolution opposing what he
branded 'escalation.'" With opposition in Congress growing, Bush said
this weekend that he believes he has the authority to ignore
the will of Congress and send more troops to Iraq. A USA
Today/Gallup Poll released this week found "more
than 6 of
10 people back the idea of a non-binding congressional resolution
expressing opposition to Bush's plan to commit an additional 21,500
U.S. troops to Iraq." A former senior Bush aide who is still close
to the White House says that if the situation in Iraq continues to
slide, "a
delegation of [conservative] senators could one day
show up in the Oval Office to tell Bush that the party is no
longer
with him and the war must end -- much like Sen. William Fulbright's
forcefully urging Lyndon Johnson to bring the Vietnam War to a close."
ENVIRONMENT - FUNDING CUT FOR GLOBAL
WARMING RESEARCH: Last year was the hottest
on record. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) last week sent out a press release confirming the link between
the warm temperatures and human-induced global warming, stating that a
"contributing factor to the unusually warm temperatures throughout 2006
also is the long-term warming trend, which has been linked
to increases in greenhouse gases." This acknowledgment came despite President
Bush's refusal to admit a link between human activities and climate
change. A new study by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS)
concludes that the government's "ability to understand and predict
hurricanes, drought and climate changes of all kinds is in danger
because of deep
cuts facing many Earth satellite programs and major delays in
launching some of its most important new instruments." NASA's earth
science budget has declined 30 percent under the Bush administration
and the NOAA, "meanwhile, has experienced enormous cost overruns and
schedule delays with its premier weather and climate mission." NAS
co-chairman Richard Anthes noted, "If things aren't reversed, we will
have passed the high-water mark for our Earth observations. ... We need
to know more, not less, about long-term aspects of climate change."
While Bush has neglected his campaign pledge
to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
will today introduce a bill to "cut
greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by the middle of the
century." Sanders's legislation has the backing of 13
leading environmental and government watchdog groups.
CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY -- REPORT
BLASTS BP FOR FAULTY SAFETY PROCEDURES: Safety problems,
including the discovery last year of pipeline
corrosion in Alaska, have tarnished BP's "carefully-crafted 'Beyond
Petroleum' image." In 2005, an explosion at BP's Texas
City refinery killed 15 people, leading the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA) to fine
the company a record $21.4
million for more than 300 alleged violations. In response, the U.S.
Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board "urged BP to create
an independent panel to review the
corporate safety culture after finding evidence that management may
have a lax attitude toward process." Today, the panel, chaired by
former Secretary of State James Baker, will release its "harshly
worded and highly critical report." The report accuses BP
of "failing to provide adequate resources to ensure safety at its US
refineries." BP has "not always ensured that it identified and
provided the resources
required for strong process safety performance at its US refineries,"
the report says. "The finding is certain to be used against the company
in the many
outstanding civil cases against BP" and could add to questions
about whether BP "was actually the environmentally friendly company that
[former CEO John Browne] said it was."
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Think Fast
"There is almost
no scientific evidence to back up the U.S. intelligence
community's use of controversial interrogation techniques in
the fight against terrorism, and experts believe some painful and
coercive approaches could hinder the ability to get good information,
according to a new report from an intelligence advisory group."
"The U.S. military has sold forbidden equipment at
least a half-dozen times to middlemen for countries -- including
Iran and China -- who exploited security flaws in the Defense
Department's surplus auctions," the AP reports.
"Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, said
in an interview that Taliban attacks surged by 200 percent in
December, and a U.S. military intelligence officer said that
since the peace deal went into effect Sept. 5 the number of attacks in
the border area has grown
by 300 percent."
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice "conveniently ignored
Egypt's internal problems during her visit, which include charges of corruption
and torture, to name a few. Rice basically thanked Egypt for its
cooperation in the region making it clear that, for the United States, 'stability,
not democracy' is the priority."
34,452: Number of Iraqi
civilians killed in 2006, according to the United Nations. More
than 36,000 Iraqi civilians were wounded last year.
Rebellion is brewing among conservatives over
President's Bush's attempt to "impose" Sen. Mel Martinez (R-FL) as
"general chairman" of his political party due to Martinez's
support for "amnesty" for illegal aliens.
Under an ethics
reform proposal the House is likely to take up and pass this week, "lawmakers
who commit crimes in office may no longer be able to rely on a
federal pension to pad their fall from grace."
Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and others argue the
Bush administration is "using a little-noticed clause in the
Patriot Act to circumvent Senate confirmation" of federal U.S.
attorneys. Senators are working
to overturn the provision, which "for the first time gave the
attorney general, rather than local federal courts, authority to
appoint interim U.S. attorneys."
And finally: The Decider still really likes making decisions. In his interview with 60 minutes, President Bush said "decision"
twenty-four times in nine minutes. The chart here "shows how often he said the word during each of the interview's nine
minutes, including two times when he practically shouted it."
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