THINK PROGRESS
The Progress Report
ENVIRONMENT
Coal's Dirty Little Secrets
Viewers tuning into Wednesday's CNN/YouTube Republican debate probably
saw commercials for "clean coal." They may have also seen an ad for the
debate in that morning's Washington Post, with a note at the bottom
reading: "Sponsored
by Clean Coal, America's Power." These initiatives were funded by
the group "Americans
For Balanced Energy Choices" (ABEC), which receives its financing
from coal companies and "their
allies in the utility and railroad sectors." They are part of a
multi-million dollar campaign aimed at generating public support "for
the beleaguered coal-producing industry at a time when plans for new
coal-fired power plants are being scrapped" nationwide.
The Center for American Progress has released a Progressive
Growth economic strategy based on building a low-carbon energy
infrastructure, based on clean, renewable energy sources, efficiency,
and greenhouse gas emission performance standards for coal that could
"fuel the creation of good jobs and good prospects for workers at all
skill levels."
DIRTY AGENDA: ABEC is a
nonprofit coalition of the top coal companies in America, including Peabody Energy,
the world's largest private-sector coal company. Top
energy executives
recently quadrupled the budget for this coal front group, bringing
ABEC's annual allocation to more
than $30 million. ABEC insists that the coal industry has a "clean"
agenda. But one of its top priorities is to expand coal production
through the promotion of
government-funded "coal to liquid" technology to convert coal
to vehicle fuels. This policy would produce twice
as much global warming pollution as ordinary gasoline production,
while consuming huge amounts of water. Since its establishment in 2000,
ABEC has received support
from the Center for Energy and Economic Development, whose website
-- even in late 2004 -- said that the group rejects the "theory
of catastrophic global climate change." Perhaps not surprisingly,
part of ABEC's agenda is to delay and weaken
any limits on carbon dioxide pollution for as long as possible and
convince Congress to give coal plants free "allowances" to emit
greenhouse gases under any future
"cap and trade" global warming plan.
DIRTY ADS: In order to sell its
agenda to the American public, ABEC has launched a $7-million,
three-month national advertising drive. National Journal notes,
"The first set of ads underscore that coal is the energy
source for about half the nation's electricity output. A second
round will tout so-called clean-coal technologies." Since January, ABEC
executive director Joe Lucas has written
at
least eight "letters to the editor" in newspapers nationwide, pushing
for
more coal plants. ABEC has specifically targeted the 2008 election,
recognizing that it needs an industry-friendly president to advance its
agenda and block global warming reform. In 2000, for example, the coal
industry donated more
than $108,000 to George W. Bush's campaign, compared to just
$16,450
for Al Gore. Similarly, in 2004, Bush raked in more than $250,000 from
the coal industry; Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) received approximately
$6,000. On Nov. 9, ABEC put out a press
release announcing that it was kicking off "its public campaign
urging Iowa caucus-goers to challenge Presidential candidates to invest
in clean coal technology and support coal as part of a sensible and
affordable energy mix."
DIRTY POLITICAL TARGETING: ABEC
also sponsored both the CNN
Democratic debate in Nevada earlier this month, as well as the CNN/YouTube
Republican debate in Florida earlier this week. These
sponsorships were targeted to pressure not only the presidential
candidates and CNN (not a single
question on global warming was asked in either debate), but also
anti-coal politicians in those states. Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-NV), for example, has stood
firmly against the construction of three
proposed major coal-fired power plants in his home
state. Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (R) is leading a "crusade
against coal." Crist has unveiled a plan to reduce his state's
carbon dioxide emissions by replacing
coal plants with solar thermal power plants. He has also canceled
plans to build new coal plants that were pushed by his predecessor,
Jeb Bush. "I am not a fan of coal," proclaimed Crist in October,
applauding the news that Tampa Electric shelved plans to build a
$2-billion
power plant. The tide is steadily turning against coal. In the past 18
months, "about a dozen states including Texas, Florida and Oklahoma
also have rejected
plans for 22 new coal-fired power plants." This week, Google also
announced that it plans to invest "hundreds
of millions of dollars" to "develop electricity from renewable
energy sources that will be cheaper than electricity produced from
coal."
DIRTY LIES: The state of Kansas
has been a particular focus in the coal industry's campaign. On Oct.
18, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment denied
air quality permits for two 700-megawatt coal-burning power
generators near Holcomb, KS, "citing health and environmental concerns associated
with carbon dioxide emissions." The decision was "the first
time a coal plant air permit application" had "ever been denied on
the basis of CO2 emissions." Less than a month later, newspapers
across Kansas ran an ad by Kansans
for Affordable Energy
attacking the decision. It featured the smiling faces of Russian
President Vladimir Putin, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, and Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, asking "why are these men smiling?" (See
the ad here.)
The
answer, according to the ad, was Gov.
Kathleen Sebelius (D): "Because the recent decision by the Sebelius
Administration means Kansas will import more natural gas from countries
like Russia, Venezuela and Iran." Kansans for Affordable Energy is partially
funded by not only by Peabody, but also Sunflower Electric Power Corp,
the company
whose
permits were rejected by Sebelius's administration. Additionally,
not only does Kansas "currently export natural
gas to other states," but the United States doesn't even "import
natural gas from Russia, Venezuela or Iran."
Under the Radar
IRAQ -- CARD REJECTS ROVE'S
CLAIM THAT
CONGRESS PUSHED BUSH TO WAR: 'HIS MOUTH GETS AHEAD OF HIS BRAIN':
Former White House adviser Karl
Rove recently asserted that "[t]he
administration was opposed" to voting for a war resolution in the
fall of 2002. "It seemed to make things move too fast,"
he argued. As ThinkProgress
documented,
key leaders in both the House and the Senate -- including
then-Majority
Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD) -- were asking Bush in 2002 to delay the
war
vote. But as Daschle recalled, when he asked Bush to delay the
vote, Bush "looked at Cheney and he looked at me, and there was a
half-smile on his face. And he said: 'We
just have to do this now.'" This morning, the White House
chief of staff at the time, Andrew
Card, appeared on MSNBC and completely discredited
Rove's
argument. "Karl Rove went on Charlie Rose and he blamed the Democrats
for pushing him and the president into war. Is that how it worked?"
asked host Joe Scarborough. "No,
that's not the way it worked," replied Card. "Sometimes his mouth
gets ahead of his brain."
MILITARY -- 28 GENERALS AND ADMIRALS
URGE REPEAL OF DON'T ASK, DON'T TELL: Retired Brig. Gen. Keith
Kerr, an openly gay man, asked Republican presidential candidates at
Wednesday's CNN/YouTube debate why they "think that American men and
women in uniform are
not
professional enough to
serve with gays and lesbians." Former Massachusetts governor Mitt
Romney hedged: "I'm
going to listen to the people who run the military" for advice on
Don't Ask Don't Tell (DADT), which bans openly gay
service members. Today, The New York Times reports that 28 retired
generals and admirals plan
to release a letter today -- the 14th
anniversary of DADT -- urging Congress to repeal the legislation.
"We respectfully urge Congress to repeal
the 'don't ask, don't tell' policy," the letter says. Signers of
the letter are all "high-ranking," including Gen. John M.
Shalikashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff when DADT was
instituted. Roughly 11,000
servicemembers have been forced out of service for being gay since
the
policy was implemented in 1993.
HEALTH CARE -- WASHINGTON SUFFERING
HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIC ON WORLD AIDS DAY: Two weeks ago, the
United Nations's top AIDS scientists said "that they have long overestimated
both the size and the course of the epidemic, which they now
believe has been slowing for nearly a decade." Still, there are 33.2
million
people in the world currently infected with HIV, and 2007 saw 2.5
million new infections. A week after the U.N. announcement, city health
officials reported
that the District of
Columbia has the
highest rate of AIDS infection in the country,
with HIV continuing to be transmitted at an epidemic pace. Black
residents, who count for 57 percent of the District's population, make
up "81 percent of new reports of HIV cases and about 86 percent of
people with AIDS." To mark tomorrow's World AIDS Day, President
Bush plans to highlight "the important
role of faith- and community-based organizations in the global
fight against HIV/AIDS." His reliance on faith-based organizations in
the past has meant that "a
full two-thirds of the money for the prevention of the sexual
spread of HIV" goes to abstinence only programs, which have failed to
prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.
Think Fast
The social networking site Facebook has "modified
a controversial service that broadcast details of its
users' online activities
outside the site to their friends, following complaints about its
privacy implications." Facebook will now give greater control to users
over what information they want advertised. MoveOn, which had mounted
an online campaign to pressure Facebook to change its policy, said
the policy could be a "huge step in the right direction."
Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee's moderate
position on immigration compared to the stances of his rivals is causing
anger in right-wing circles. "He was an absolute disaster
on immigration as governor," said Roy Beck, president of the
conservative group NumbersUSA.
"Without a serious effort at national conciliation, American troops are just holding down the lid on a pressure cooker. Iraq's rival militias, the insurgents, the bitter sectarian resentments and the meddling neighbors haven't gone anywhere," writes The New York Times in an editorial today.
51 percent: College students who say "where a candidate stands on the environment would be very important to their vote," according to a survey conducted by American University students.
Sen. Joe Biden (D-DE) stated unequivocally that he would move to impeach President Bush if the administration bombs Iran without congressional approval. "The President has no authority to unilaterally attack Iran and if he does, as foreign relations committee chairman, I will move to impeach," he said.
A New York Times analysis found that "Medicare spends billions of dollars each year on products and services that are available at far lower prices from retail pharmacies and online stores." For example, Medicare spends more than double the drugstore price on oxygen tanks.
Rep. John Murtha (D-PA) acknowledged that the surge, which he had firmly criticized, "has led to military successes. But he also warned repeatedly that the Iraqis were not doing enough to capitalize on those gains. 'I think the surge is working but that's only one element. It's working because of the increase in troops,' he said, 'but the thing that has to happen is that the Iraqis have to do this themselves.'"
A new report by the Department of Labor Inspector General finds that 87 percent of the funds handed out by the Department's Employment and Training Administration in the past six years were through "sole-source grants," meaning $271 million in federal funds were awarded without any competition.
And finally: Ann Coulter suggests she should be the new White House press secretary. "She told a crowd gathered at the National Press Club for the National Journalism Center's 30th anniversary that she deserves" to be White House press secretary for the last six months of Bush's presidency. "I'm sure she would find it to be a fascinating experience," said White House Press Secretary Dana Perino.
Good News
"In an unprecedented show of solidarity, leaders from 150 global companies endorsed the idea of...legally binding" cuts in their greenhouse gas emissions.
State Watch
TEXAS:
State's director of science curriculum said "she resigned this month
under pressure from officials who felt she gave the appearance of
criticizing the instruction of intelligent design."
MISSOURI:
Gov. Matt Blunt's (R) battle to save Christmas.
POLITICS:
"[V]oters think female governors are better at getting things done and
solving problems than their male counterparts."
Blog Watch
THINK PROGRESS:
CNN's irresponsible debate coverage undermines its claim to be the
"Most
Trusted Name in News."
FIREDOGLAKE:
Time's Joe Klein's source for his FISA distortions was Rep. Peter
Hoekstra (R-MI).
HUFF
POLITICS:
How Rep. John Murtha's (D-PA) "surge" comments are being taken out of
context.
MEDIA MATTERS:
CNN's Campbell Brown called MoveOn.org "American insurgents."
Daily Grill
"[T]he administration was opposed to voting on it [whether to go to war
in Iraq] in the fall of 2002."
- Karl Rove, 11/21/07
VERSUS
MSNBC'S JOE SCARBOROUGH: We have to start with something that we all
are talking about a couple of days ago where Karl Rove went on Charlie
Rose and he blamed the Democrats for pushing him and the president into
war. Is that how it worked?
CARD: No, that's not the way it worked.
-- Then-White House chief of staff Andrew Card, 11/29/07
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