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Month: October 2015

Friendly reminder #BushCheney

Friendly reminder

by digby

January 29, 2002

WASHINGTON (CNN) — President Bush personally asked Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle Tuesday to limit the congressional investigation into the events of September 11, congressional and White House sources told CNN.

The request was made at a private meeting with congressional leaders Tuesday morning. Sources said Bush initiated the conversation.

He asked that only the House and Senate intelligence committees look into the potential breakdowns among federal agencies that could have allowed the terrorist attacks to occur, rather than a broader inquiry that some lawmakers have proposed, the sources said

Tuesday’s discussion followed a rare call to Daschle from Vice President Dick Cheney last Friday to make the same request.

“The vice president expressed the concern that a review of what happened on September 11 would take resources and personnel away from the effort in the war on terrorism,” Daschle told reporters.

But, Daschle said, he has not agreed to limit the investigation.

“I acknowledged that concern, and it is for that reason that the Intelligence Committee is going to begin this effort, trying to limit the scope and the overall review of what happened,” said Daschle, D-South Dakota.

“But clearly, I think the American people are entitled to know what happened and why,” he said.

Cheney met last week in the Capitol with the chairmen of the House and Senate intelligence committees and, according to a spokesman for Senate Intelligence Chairman Bob Graham, D-Florida, “agreed to cooperate with their effort.”

The heads of both intelligence committees have been meeting to map out a way to hold a bipartisan House-Senate investigation and hearings.

They were discussing how the inquiry would proceed, including what would be made public, what would remain classified, and how broad the probe would be.

Graham’s spokesman said the committees will review intelligence matters only.

“How ill prepared were we and why? We are looking towards the possibility of addressing systemic problems through legislation,” said spokesman Paul Anderson.

Some Democrats, such as Sens. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut and Robert Torricelli of New Jersey, have been calling for a broad inquiry looking at various federal government agencies beyond the intelligence community.

“We do not meet our responsibilities to the American people if we do not take an honest look at the federal government and all of its agencies and let the country know what went wrong,” Torricelli said.

“The best assurance that there’s not another terrorist attack on the United States is not simply to hire more federal agents or spend more money. It’s to take an honest look at what went wrong. Who or what failed? There’s an explanation owed to the American people,” he said.

Although the president and vice president told Daschle they were worried a wide-reaching inquiry could distract from the government’s war on terrorism, privately Democrats questioned why the White House feared a broader investigation to determine possible culpability.

Sanders Requests Fraud Investigation by Attorney General Lynch into Exxon, by @Gaius_Publius

Sanders Requests Fraud Investigation by Attorney General Lynch into Exxon

by Gaius Publius

Senator Sanders to Attorney General Loretta Lynch on Exxon:

“We are writing regarding a potential instance of corporate fraud – behavior that may qualify as a violation of federal law.”

And that’s how it’s done.

Bernie Sanders, from his Senate office, has asked Attorney General Loretta Lynch to “form a taskforce by December 19, 2015, to determine whether there is
sufficient evidence to launch an official inquiry against any actors and
entities involved.” Why? Because of “a potential instance of corporate fraud – behavior that may ultimately qualify as a violation of federal law.”

Sanders cites the Inside Climate News stories we’ve been following here and here. If the taskforce he asks for does determine there is sufficient evidence to launch an inquiry, we’re in RICO territory.

I should add that the O’Malley campaign has also signaled it’s onboard with RICO as well (via Twitter). This is much more forceful, though both are helpful. Thanks to both candidates for their strong pro-climate efforts.

The Sanders press release is here. The letter is here and reprinted below. The trove of Exxon documents published by Inside Climate News is here.

October 20, 2015

The Honorable Loretta Lynch
Attorney General of the United States
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001

Dear Attorney General Loretta Lynch:

I am writing concerning a potential instance of corporate fraud – behavior that may ultimately qualify as a violation of federal law. I respectfully request the Department investigate these allegations, and take appropriate action if the investigation yields evidence of wrongdoing.

According to an eight-month investigation by journalists at Inside Climate News, Exxon – now ExxonMobil – may have conducted extensive research on climate change as early as 1977. As a result, it appears that top Exxon scientists concluded both that climate change is real and that it was caused in part by the carbon pollution resulting from use of Exxon’s petroleum-based products. In addition, the purported internal business memoranda accompanying the news report asserted that Exxon’s so-called “climate research program” was launched in response to a perceived existential threat to its business model.

In 1998, the New York Times reported that Exxon participated in the American Petroleum Institute’s Global Climate Science Communications Plan, an effort aimed at stressing “uncertainty” on climate science. Exxon has since contributed more than $31 million since 1998 to think tanks and organizations that cast doubt on mainstream climate science.

These reports, if true, raise serious allegations of a misinformation campaign that may have caused public harm similar to the tobacco industry’s actions – conduct that led to federal racketeering convictions. Based on available public information, it appears that Exxon knew its product was causing harm to the public, and spent millions of dollars to obfuscate the facts in the public discourse. The information that has come to light about Exxon’s past activities raises potentially serious concerns that should be investigated.

I am heartened that, according to your September 9, 2015, memorandum “[f]ighting corporate fraud and other misconduct is a top priority of the Department of Justice.” I request that the Department form a taskforce by December 19, 2015, to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to launch an official inquiry against any actors and entities involved. I look forward to hearing the Department’s recommendations in a timely manner.

Thank you for your time and close consideration of this matter.

Sincerely,

Bernard Sanders
United States Senator

Bold moves like this are what we need. Next up? Ask what Hillary Clinton thinks. If she agrees with Sanders and O’Malley, we have a trifecta.

If you want to sign a petition asking the government to prosecute Exxon, go here.

And if you’d like to say thank you to Bernie Sanders for this excellent advocacy of the people’s interest, you can do so here. Adjust the split any way you like at the link.

(A version of this piece appeared at Down With Tyranny. GP article archive here.)

GP

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Road to Dystopia by @BloggersRUs

Road to Dystopia
by Tom Sullivan

Rep. Paul Ryan seems to have cleared the hurdles to replacing John Boehner as Speaker now that a “supermajority” of the House Freedom Caucus has agreed to support Ryan for the job, if not to endorse him outright. Ryan is not far right enough for enough of them to prevent that. So uncertainties remain reports the Washington Post:

Ryan could still decide not to serve as speaker, and some conservative activists have engaged in a vigorous campaign to cast doubt on his record, which might give some members cold feet before votes are cast next week.

This was not the job Ryan wanted, after all. Perhaps, as Shakespeare put it, Ryan will have greatness thrust upon him. Peter Dreier disabuses Salon readers of any notion that the selfie-admiring Ryan was either born great or achieved greatness:

Let’s start with Ryan’s outrageous hypocrisy. Ryan worships at the altar of novelist Ayn Rand, the philosopher of you’re-on-your-own selfishness, whose books have been required reading for his Congressional staffers. Like Rand, he consistently demonizes people who improve their lives with the help of government. Ryan seems to be unaware of how much his own family and his own financial success has been influenced by “big government.”

Despite Ryan’s persistent attacks on government spending, his family’s construction business has been anchored in building roads on government contracts. Despite his worship of private-sector entrepreneurs, he’s spent his entire career as a government employee. Despite being a crusader against anti-poverty programs, Ryan is a millionaire who made his money the old-fashioned way: by marrying a woman who inherited a fortune.

Good luck keeping the Freedom Caucus in line. They still want the ability to hold a “no confidence” vote over the new Speaker’s head. The conservative media was mocking him after the preconditions Ryan set for taking the Speaker’s gig included eliminating this lever:

At one point on Drudge Report, headlines blared: “KING PAUL: PLEDGE YOUR ALLEGIANCE TO ME,” “DO IT BY FRIDAY,” “HE’S A DEM FAVORITE,” “OBAMA’S NEW PARTNER,” ‘F’ conservative rating,” and “WANTS TO SCRAP THOMAS JEFFERSON’S RULE.”

“[Ryan] wants to get elected after it is made impossible to get rid of him, then he will really get into specifics … Amnesty anyone?” Red State founder Erick Erickson wrote. “This would be a terrible, terrible deal for House Conservatives. It would gut their ability to pull the House Republicans to the right.”

That would be bad, of course. Politico cites a study by the Center for Responsive Politics that examined the funding behind the House Freedom Caucus. In addition to the usual “banking and auto dealerships that traditionally support Republican candidates,” the caucus receives funding from the Kochs and the Club for Growth. Pulling House Republicans further right is just what they have in mind:

The analysis, based on a review of campaign and leadership PAC donations reported by each caucus member during his or her time in Congress, shows that the Club for Growth, the free-enterprise advocacy group that claims 100,000 members, has contributed $1.77 million, or about 1 percent of the more than $175 million the caucus members raised in total. The club was the No. 1 donor for 11 members — more members than any other benefactor.

[snip]

Koch Industries, the closely held oil and gas conglomerate out of Wichita, Kansas, contributed $599,400 over time to members now aligned with the caucus. The company’s PAC, combined with individual contributions from Koch employees, ranked as the top contributor only to Rep. Tim Huelskamp of Kansas. But the analysis showed that it spread around enough money to be the second-biggest donor overall to caucus members. The analysis did not cover the wide network of political groups marshaled by the Koch brothers that collectively have evolved as a major funding source for Republican candidates.

If the Rand-loving Ryan is not the darling of these characters, what sort of libertarian utopia do they have in mind now? The recent past president and CEO of the Koch-funded Cato Institute is John Allison. The former head of BB&T was influential in funding “Moral Foundations of Capitalism” courses in colleges, where Atlas Shrugged is the principle text. Now Paul Ryan is not right enough?

Whether by happenstance or by design, Republicans seem bent on taking the country on the Road to Dystopia, sans Crosby, and definitely sans Hope.

How can you tell it’s a witch hunt?

How can you tell it’s a witch hunt?


by digby

This from Think Progress should be enough to persuade Americans that the Republicans admitting the Benghazi committee is a partisan witch hunt are speaking the truth but who knows?

Does it really make sense that the attack on the Benghazi embassy is so much more significant than any of these other events? Seriously, do people even know where Benghazi is?

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QOTD: Trumpie

QOTD: Trumpie

by digby

He was looking forward to watching Clinton be burned at the stake but Gowdy’s wimping out on him:

“And then yesterday, I watched Trey, who I do respect, I think he’s a terrific guy, but he seemed to be doing a big pivot. He said, ‘Well this isn’t about Hillary Clinton.’ You know I’m pretty good at figuring this stuff out, and he seemed to be doing Sean, I’m sure you saw it, he seemed to be doing a big pivot away from Hillary Clinton. And I was trying to figure out what that was all about. So you may not be as happy as you think with these hearings. I just don’t know. The hearings — I was looking forward to them. But with all that’s happening, and I was surprised that he pivoted away so much from Hillary. He said these hearings are not about her, actually — we want to discuss other people much more so. And it sounded like he was sort of pulling away from going after her. So I’m going to have to see what the hearings are all about,”

I have no idea if the Republicans are going to pull their punches tomorrow. Brian Beutler astutely speculated that they may adopt a more passive-aggressive approach (and admonishes the media to pay close attention and not get fooled.) But are these people that smart? I doubt it. I think they either go for the jugular or whiff. Subtlety isn’t their strong suit.

Trump — and his followers — are looking for a brawl and will undoubtedly be scathing in their criticism if they don’t get it.

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The Freedom Caucus still isn’t happy with Paul Ryan #shocker

The Freedom Caucus still isn’t happy with Paul Ryan

by digby

Shocker:

After Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) announced on Tuesday night that he will consider a bid for House speaker as long as a few conditions are met, members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus expressed skepticism about Ryan and his proposals.

Ryan asked that three groups of Republicans, including the House Freedom Caucus, endorse him by Friday in order to ensure that he will run for the top leadership spot. Freedom Caucus members did not dismiss Ryan’s candidacy outright, but members indicated that they will need to speak with Ryan and deliberate before backing him. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), chair of the caucus, told Roll Call that members of the group will need to take a vote.

It seems the biggest obstacle in Ryan’s path to gaining the Freedom Caucus’ support are his proposals about rules changes in the House, specifically changes to the motion to vacate the chair.

Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-KS) told Roll Call on Tuesday that the motion to vacate the chair, a resolution that allows the House to vote to oust the speaker, is essential.

“How do you get rid of a speaker that has problems?” he asked. “Every organization, except for a dictatorship, has a motion to vacate the chair.”

“Never thought Paul Ryan would come in and say, ‘I want more power than John Boehner has,'” Huelskamp told Roll Call.

On Wednesday morning, Huelskamp indicated that he still supports the Freedom Caucus’ initial choice for speaker, Rep. Daniel Webster (R-FL).

Rep. Raul Labrador (R-ID) told Roll Call on Tuesday that changes to the motion to vacate the chair is a “non-starter.”
[…]
“I think we need to invite him in and have him expand on what he meant. You know he just gave a short speech,” Labrador told Politico, referencing his concerns about the motion to vacate the chair.

You have to love these guys. They have clout and they are reveling in it. So much so that they don’t have a clue that they sound like power mad fools:

But the Freedom Caucus, a secret group of far right Republicans, has a mandate to run the entire country if not the world!!!! They set pre-conditions, no one else.

If I had to bet, I’d say that Ryan eventually becomes speaker — and that he’ll last a year at most at which point he’ll leave to spend a whole lot more time with his family. These people will have to be beaten at the ballot box before anything changes.

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Thank you Joe. (But you’re still wrong about bipartisanship)

Thank you Joe. (But you’re still wrong about bipartisanship)


by digby

So Biden is out. That’s a big relief. But he did take a couple of shots at Clinton in his farewell speech on the issue of bipartisanship. I wrote about that fallacy in my piece for Salon this morning:

At the time of this writing we are still “Waiting for Joe” but from the sound of the Vice Presidents Biden’s comments, if he isn’t running he’s decided to throw his weight behind Jim Webb’s possible Independent campaign. He came out swinging against Hillary Clinton, with a sucker punch over her admission in the recent debate that among the NRA, the pharmaceutical industry and the Iranians, she’s also proud that Republicans consider her an enemy. Her comment was greeted with wild cheering among Democrats who viscerally agreed with her allusion to Roosevelt’s famous line about “welcomed their hatred” in reference to the party which has turned from an opposition party into a gang of anarchists and witch hunters. Oddly, Biden seems to think that fairly obvious recognition of reality is a weakness. He made the point in several different venues over the last couple of days that he does not think of Republicans as “enemies” but rather sees them as friends, the implication being that he will be able to work with them in ways the former secretary of state cannot.
Ezra Klein suggests in this piece for Vox that this may be Biden’s argument going forward and the ultimate rationale for his campaign. Unfortunately, while this sweet sentiment surely pleases the ghosts of Tip O’Neill and Ronald Reagan, it has no bearing on the reality of American politics in 2016.
I have written about this before, but it’s worth repeating. Dan Pfeiffer, one of President Obama’s closest advisors, gave an exit interview to Jonathan Chait when he left the White House a while back, in which he explained the evolution of thinking from the time the administration first assumed office.
Per Chait:
The original premise of Obama’s first presidential campaign was that he could reason with Republicans—or else, by staking out obviously reasonable stances, force them to moderate or be exposed as extreme and unyielding. It took years for the White House to conclude that this was false, and that, in Pfeiffer’s words, “what drives 90 percent of stuff is not the small tactical decisions or the personal relationships but the big, macro political incentives.”
It certainly did not help that Joe Biden was friends with Republicans back in 2011 when he went behind Harry Reid’s back and negotiated the deal which will be remembered as the low point of the Obama administration — a low point which served as a lesson in how not to deal with Republicans.
Biden’s paean to bipartisanship is old thinking, a vestige of the past. That he is still  making this argument in the face of all we know should strike fear into the hearts of Democrats everywhere, should he actually become president.
As of right now, the Republican Party cannot even agree on who should be the Republican Speaker of the House, what the legislative processes should be, how government is structured under the constitution or even what government is supposed to do. Touting your friendships with old bull Republicans in the Congress is unresponsive to the challenges currently facing the party and the country.
The latest Monmouth poll is very instructive in this regard. This is not a problem that will be resolved by the Democratic Party reaching across the aisle. There is no point. The battle rages within the Republican Party itself:
A majority of 57% are dissatisfied with the Republican leaders in Congress – including 29% who are very dissatisfied and 28% who are somewhat dissatisfied. Only 42% are satisfied, including just 5% who are very satisfied and 37% who are somewhat satisfied. Majorities of all ideological groups are dissatisfied.
“The turmoil over selecting a new Speaker of the House reflects an unhappy party base. Because this disaffection reaches every corner of the GOP electorate, there is no clear indication about which route the party should take to right this ship,” said Murray.
The conservative Freedom Caucus stymied a smooth transition after John Boehner’s surprise resignation announcement last month. However, somewhat more Republican voters say that the Freedom Caucus and similar conservative members of Congress have too little (39%) rather than too much (25%) power, with another 21% saying they have the right amount of influence.
It is clear that the even within the Republican Party it is impossible to form a compromise at the moment. The fatuous delusion that there is some middle ground to be found with the GOP and the Democrats sounds like something out of a fairy tale. Indeed, as Greg Sargent points out in this perspicacious piece in the Washington Post, the most successful moments of the Obama administration’ dealing with this outlaw GOP congress have been, as Dan Pfeiffer admitted in that exit interview, when they accepted that the only way to deal was to simply say no:
“The whole point of Obama’s repeated refusals during his second term to negotiate on the debt limit was to break the Republican addiction to using leverage in fiscal standoffs to extract concessions from Democrats. The idea was that, even if these standoffs continued to be treated falsely as conventional negotiations, they had in fact strayed on to unconventional, dangerous grounds. The ground rules needed to be reset, so that these standoffs no longer threatened to unleash extreme damage (say, if we defaulted), if something were to go wrong and a deal were to fall through. And it worked. In this sense, it was the refusal to negotiate with Republicans that in the end produced more functional government.”
We are not dealing with normal political opponents. This has been clear to many observers for  two decades ago, since GOP House Oversight Committee chairman Dan Burton was blowing up watermelons in his backyard to prove that Bill and Hillary Clinton must have killed their friend and colleague Vince Foster. But some people still haven’t grokked that the Republican Party has gone completely over the cliff. Jim Webb and Joe Biden are apparently among them.
Nobody really knows what is going to break the fever. We are in unmapped political territory. But if the definition of insanity is continuously doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result, then the country would be certifiably nuts to be seduced again into believing that the problem will be solved by a Democratic president reaching out the hand of friendship to Republicans in hopes of finding a reasonable compromise.  Certainly, until the Republicans sober up and figure out how to tame the right wing monster in their own midst, Democrats will have to give up any illusions about the president and the speaker knocking back bourbons on the Truman balcony after working hours and concentrate on how to keep these obstructionist Republicans from destroying the country while working around them to bring the country forward. The presidency today is a very tough job that requires creative thinking about how to govern with an insurrectionist opposition. The old bromides about bipartisanship are no longer convincing.
Times have changed. Sanders and Clinton both get this. Perhaps it’s because they have not ever been welcomed into the old boys club as Webb and Biden were. In today’s political environment that experience may be exactly what’s called for.

Patiently whittling away at the American Dream

Patiently whittling away at the American Dream

by digby

Michael Grunwald’s interview with Grover Norquist is just … depressing. Norquist plays a long game. And slowly but surely he’s been winning, just by attrition.

MG: The fiscal cliff deal in 2013 did raise taxes on everyone making more than $450,000 a year, and you were actually OK with that.

GN: That was a phenomenal victory. All the Bush tax cuts were going to expire on January 1. All Obama had to do was twiddle his thumbs and go for a walk, and taxes were going to increase by $5 trillion over a decade. He would have gotten the largest tax increase in the history of western civilization. Not only didn’t he do that, he allowed 85 percent of the Bush tax cuts to be made permanent, for 99 percent of the country.

MG: But taxes went up, and you were OK with it. A lot of people expected you to take the maximalist position, that you can’t vote for anything that allows taxes to go up.

GN: The pledge has been a powerful tool because it’s written down, it doesn’t move, it’s simple. It’s one line: You can’t vote for net tax increases. It’s a binary thing: Fred either voted to raise taxes from the status quo or he didn’t. It’s a guardrail. When the law says a tax cut has lapsed, I can’t say that the failure to renew it is a tax increase, even if I want it renewed. Yes, voters might think that, but the pledge is the pledge. If I changed the pledge to fit the circumstances, Harry Reid would be right when he says, ‘Oh, Republicans just do whatever is Grover’s thought of the day.’

MG: My one quibble is that you make it sound like Republicans snookered Obama into cutting taxes for most Americans. I think he was happy to cut taxes for all but the very wealthy. Even Democrats are coming around to the Grover way!

Sigh…

Let’s not forget the other side of Grover’s equation which is to cut government services. That also happened in dramatic fashion in those budget deals. Sequestration is still in effect and there’s almost no chance those vital services for poor people will ever be reinstated. These things are going to have to be done over from scratch — and that’s not easy.

A fossil-fuel-exporting superpower that lectures the rest of the world, by @Gaius_Publius

A fossil-fuel-exporting superpower that lectures the rest of the world

by Gaius Publius

Bottom line first — the title of this piece is taken from the following quotation:

“We’re a fossil-fuel-exporting super­power that goes around lecturing the rest of the world about cutting emissions,” said Paul Bledsoe, who was an adviser on climate during the Clinton administration. “The United States is reducing its domestic coal use and then simply exporting some of those emissions abroad.”

Consider that the next time you want to give Barack Obama, or any U.S. president, credit for not allowing drilling in the U.S. part of the Arctic. Easy to do when Shell says it’s not even profitable. If the U.S. government were truly serious about cutting global CO2 emissions, it would stop all oil, gas and coal leases on public lands. Yes, we’re even leasing coal rights.

The Hypocrisy of the U.S. Government

And now the detail. The federal government leases the right to extract burnable carbon in many forms from publicly owned land. This story is about leasing the right to extract burnable coal. Joby Warrick writing at the Washington Post:

U.S. exports its greenhouse-gas emissions — as coal. Profitable coal.

Gillette, Wyo. — A few feet below this prairie town lies one of North America’s biggest coal deposits, a 100-foot-thick slab of brittle black rock spanning an area the size of Rhode Island — nearly all of it owned by the U.S. taxpayer.Just a dozen nearby mines, scattered across a valley known as the Powder River Basin, contain enough coal to meet the country’s electricity needs for decades. But burning all of it would release more than 450 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere — more than all greenhouse-gas emissions from all sources since 2000.

The Obama administration is seeking to curb the United States’ appetite for the basin’s coal, which scientists say must remain mostly in the ground to prevent a disastrous warming of the planet. Yet each year, nearly half a billion tons of this U.S.-owned fuel are hauled from the region’s vast strip mines and millions of tons are shipped overseas for other countries to burn. Government and industry reports predict a surge in exports of Powder River coal over the next decade, at a time when climate experts are warning of an urgent need to reduce coal burning to prevent global temperatures from soaring.

Each shipment highlights what critics describe as a hypocrisy underlying U.S. climate policy: While boasting of pollution cuts at home, the United States is facilitating the sale of large quantities of government-owned coal abroad.

“We’re a fossil-fuel-exporting super­power that goes around lecturing the rest of the world about cutting emissions,” said Paul Bledsoe, who was an adviser on climate during the Clinton administration. “The United States is reducing its domestic coal use and then simply exporting some of those emissions abroad.”

It would be fair if we took the sum of the calculated CO2-emissions savings via President Obama’s EPA emissions plan, and reduced that total by the amount of increased emissions from exported coal, oil and gas resulting from (very profitable, but not to us) federal carbon leases. From what the one hand gives, subtract what the other hand takes back.

Put differently, this program of leasing rights to extract carbon from federal lands and offshore waters hides what looks like the real purpose of these programs — to covertly enhance the profits of companies like Exxon while other programs publicly diminish them.

Leasing Coal Rights on Federal Land Is a Very Profitable Business

The other aspect of this business — the business the government is in when it leases the right to extract carbon from public land — is that it’s giving away publicly owned resources for nearly nothing. Warrick again:

Nearly all of the coal is ­government-owned as a result of ­century-old laws that cede to the federal government the ownership of minerals that lie beneath much of the West’s land. Mining companies in the basin typically pay as little as $1 a ton for the federal coal they mine, although Washington assesses additional royalties and fees, and requires bonding to ensure the sites are cleaned up after mining operations end.

Coal company officials insist that taxpayers are getting an exceptional deal.

“The law requires maximum economic recovery for these reserves,” said John Eaves, chairman of the board for Arch Coal, the coal giant and the operator of Black Thunder, a Powder River Basin mine that ranks among the largest surface mines in the world. “Few industries anywhere generate such a high percentage of value for the public good.”

The “value” here stems in part from the fact that Powder River coal is cheap [to mine], by world standards. By a geology quirk, the basin’s biggest coal seam is unusually thick and sits just below the surface. There are no tunnels to dig and no mountaintops to blast away. The labor and materials required to extract the coal puts the average going price at about $10 a ton, a quarter of the cost of coal mined in Appalachia and little more than a sixth of the market price of Chinese coal. Wyoming’s coal contains less energy but also less sulfur, so it burns more cleanly.

What that means is this — the companies are getting an exceptional deal. They buy leases at $1 per ton, they sell the coal for $10 per ton, and their product is so attractively priced that they can more than compete on price against coal mined elsewhere, which sweetens the volume.

What Should the Government Do?

You could argue that the government should at least strike a better bargain in exchanges for the public’s property, the carbon it owns under public land in Western states. But a better argument is that the government should just stop, unilaterally. By that I mean:

  • Stop issuing new leases for carbon extraction on public land or offshore waters. A total freeze.
     
  • Use every legal means possible to cancel existing leases at the earliest possible moment.

Again, I’m waiting for the first climate-serious candidate to promise to use his or her power as president to do this simple, easy to accomplish act. Seems like an obvious proposal, yes?

(A version of this piece appeared at Down With Tyranny. GP article archive here.)

GP

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80 percent of winning is just showing up by @BloggersRUs

80 percent of winning is just showing up
by Tom Sullivan

People ask me, Bernie or Hillary? I tell them I don’t care. My fight is not in Washington, D.C. It is here. I care that someone from the left side of the aisle wins the presidency in November 2016. I need those next 2-3 Supreme Court picks. I’m just not that particular which left-leaning president gets to pick them. And good luck getting them approved by a Republican-controlled Senate. (More on that later.)

The old saying goes: Democrats want to fall in love; Republicans just fall in line. You might have trouble convincing John Boehner of the latter, but the former still seems operative. Bernie-mania is this year’s Obama-mania. It is as if the left’s disappointments with the Obama administration never happened. They’ve found a brand new lover and it will be totally different this time. For a movement confident of its intellectual heft, we are really slow learners.

Matthew Yglesias points out the obvious:

The presidency is extremely important, of course. But there are also thousands of critically important offices all the way down the ballot. And the vast majority — 70 percent of state legislatures, more than 60 percent of governors, 55 percent of attorneys general and secretaries of state — are in Republicans hands. And, of course, Republicans control both chambers of Congress. Indeed, even the House infighting reflects, in some ways, the health of the GOP coalition. Republicans are confident they won’t lose power in the House and are hungry for a vigorous argument about how best to use the power they have.

In that much, Yglesias is right. The left (and the DNC) needs to lose its quadrennial infatuation with the race at the top of the ticket if it wants to regain control of the Congress and the state legislatures (and redistricting) by the 2020 census. “See you in four years,” one voter cheerfully told one of our electioneers outside the county Board of Elections in 2008. We elected the first black president and passed the ACA. Democrats went back to their couches and let Obama handle (or not handle) the rest. Millions of Democrats stayed home in 2010, as they do habitually in off-year elections, and ceded redistricting control to Republican legislatures. The GOP had REDMAP, and Democrats helped them make it successful. In 2014, the country got redder and the gerrymandering got worse. Here is what election night looked like across the South in 2014:

President Hillary Clinton won’t fix that. President Bernie Sanders won’t either. You have to fix that.

If 80 percent of life is just showing up, Howard Dean had it right with his 50 state plan. Mark Warner got close when he told Yearly Kos in 2006, “[W]e cannot just go after 16 states and then try to hit a triple bank-shot to get Ohio or Florida.” Of course, Warner meant Democrats should field a presidential candidate that could compete in 50 states. What Democrats need to do instead is strengthen state parties and compete down-ballot in 50 states. Dean understands this. If you don’t show up to play, you forfeit. While we bicker about Hillary vs. Bernie, the GOP shows up to play in states where the DNC doesn’t dedicate resources the way Dean wanted to.

Aside from Supreme Court picks, the real fight is not in Washington, D.C. but in the states. Sending an Obama or (current crush) Sanders to the White House without substantial gains in the House, Senate, and in state legislatures is a recipe for the same kind of congressional gridlock we have already, and for continued erosion of voting and personal rights, and degradation of infrastructure and public education in the states. Those red states in the middle of the country the DNC ignores may not have many people or electoral votes, but they each get two U.S. Senators and state legislatures. The left cannot afford to ignore that.

But look again at the graphic above. North Carolina was the only state in the country with a net pickup of state legislature seats last year. Instead of wringing hands over all that red, maybe the DNC, DSCC and DCCC should be asking themselves what those guys did right. In nonpartisan judicial elections in 2014, North Carolina Democrats also took three out of three contested Supreme Court races and won two out of three contested Appeals Court races. And those, in a sweep election where the GOP should have won it all. Republicans in the North Carolina legislature responded in 2015 by changing the way North Carolina elects judges.

Late in the afternoon on Election Day 2014, an election protection attorney from Massachusetts told me with some respect, “I have never seen an operation like this.” That was before the polls closed and we picked up two of those three legislative seats, one from an ALEC board member. Those were in state house districts Republicans drew to be safe GOP seats.

Yglesias writes, “But Democrats have nothing at all in the works to redress their crippling weakness down the ballot.” Nothing? Maybe they are just not looking. Maybe they are not looking in the right place.

People ask me, Bernie or Hillary? I tell them I don’t care. As long as the Democratic nominee sends me lawyers, guns and money.