What the President said …


Last night, President Obama addressed the nation about the Gulf Coast oil spill. He laid out a crucial plan for recovery in the face of this unprecedented environmental disaster, and he called on Americans to seize this moment to end our addiction to fossil fuels and embrace clean energy.

The House of Representatives has already passed comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation. And tomorrow, the Senate Democratic caucus will meet to determine what legislation to push in the wake of the Deepwater Oil Disaster.

The Senate must choose between two paths — but only one will embrace a clean energy future.

The first path focuses on the short term. It would do what is necessary to stop the leak, hold BP accountable, and hopefully tighten regulations on offshore drilling. But ultimately, it would do nothing to change our addiction to fossil fuels or the dirty energy policies that led to this disaster.

The second path is bolder. We would still prioritize stopping the leak, but rather than being satisfied with a quick fix, we’ll finally seize control of our own destiny with comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation. We would create millions of jobs and strengthen our economy. We’d reduce our dependence on foreign oil and make our nation more secure. And we would prevent future environmental disasters by embracing clean, American energy solutions.

When the Senate Democratic Caucus meets tomorrow, they will make this choice for all of America. We know it will be far too easy for Senators to take the easy way out, and we can’t let that happen. In the next 24 hours, we have a crucial window to help decide our country’s future.

Your Senators will be in this meeting on Thursday and it’s essential that they hear from you before they make up their mind. Call your Senators now and ask them to seize this opportunity and support comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation.

Call your Senators Now:

Senator Cantwell:
202-224-3441

Senator Murray:
202-224-2621

Report your call here.

Once connected tell them:

  • You are a constituent.
  • We must take a bold stand in the wake of the Deepwater Oil Disaster.
  • Only a bill that caps carbon will end our reliance on dangerous, dirty energy.
  • Please, support a comprehensive climate and clean energy bill at the Thursday caucus meeting.

If ever there was a time for our Senators to stand up and end the devastating, dirty energy policies that have weakened our economy, endangered our national security and led to the worst environmental disaster in our nation’s history — this is the time.

But the influence of the oil and coal lobbies in Washington is still overwhelming, and Senators will be tempted to support a band-aid bill that claims to help the Gulf without actually confronting the dirty energy policies that made the Deepwater spill a reality.

This Thursday is decision day. Will the Democratic Caucus push for a new way forward or will they settle for more of the same?

Now is the time to make our voices heard. Call your Senators and ask them to support comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation on Thursday.

Report your call.

Our leaders won’t rise above the forces of opposition without our help.

Thanks for your work at this crucial moment,

Dave Boundy
Campaign Manager
The Climate Protection Action Fund’s Repower America campaign

DONATE
Contributions or gifts to the Climate Protection Action Fund are not tax deductible.

The NRA …


UNDER THE RADAR

ThinkProgress.org

ETHICS — HOUSE LAWMAKERS CAVE TO NRA, EXEMPT THE POWERFUL GUN LOBBY FROM KEY FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE RULES: On Monday, House Democrats succumbed to demands from the National Rifle Association (NRA), exempting the powerful gun lobby from key financial disclosure rules outlined in the DISCLOSE Act. The bipartisan legislation, introduced in April, is a response to the Supreme Court’s Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision, which dramatically changed campaign finance rules to allow corporations to “spend unlimited sums” in elections. The DISCLOSE Act’s focus is to increase disclosure requirements for corporations, labor unions, trade associations, and nonprofit advocacy groups that spend money on ads to influence federal elections. The most persistent voice opposing this reform — claiming the bill impinges on the group’s free speech and imposes burdensome regulations — has been, unsurprisingly, the NRA. But under the new “carveout,” groups wouldn’t have to follow the requirements “if they have more than 1 million members, raise no more than 15 percent of their funds from corporations and have existed for more than 10 years.” Campaign finance reform experts said that the only group that really fits these qualifications is the NRA. (Unions are not included in the deal.) Several supporters of the DISCLOSE Act said that they were pulling their support for the bill because of the new exemptions. “It’s hard to take a look at a bill that’s supposed to reduce influence and see a carveout for a huge special interest and still support it,” U.S. PIRG told The Progress Report. The NRA “has given almost $450,000 to congressional candidates for 2010 and the gun group has made about $520,000 in independent expenditures.” The lobbying organization also successfully killed legislation giving D.C. residents the right to vote by convincing the Senate to add an unrelated amendment that would wipe out the District’s tough gun laws.

ThinkProgress.org


Last night was President Obama’s first Oval Office address, and he used the weighty occasion to address the nation’s concerns about what is happening on the Gulf Coast, 57 days after the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded and began spewing oil into the Gulf of Mexico. Obama told the American public what has happened, what government officials and the private sector are doing to address the crisis, the steps that still need to be taken, and perhaps most significantly, what long-term lessons the country should take from the incident. “Presidents often save the Oval Office address for matters of war and peace,” wrote Politico’s Glenn Thrush, adding that Obama’s speech “conveyed the image of a leader on wartime footing” in a “battle” against an environmental disaster. Yesterday, the government released new figures showing that as much as 60,000 barrels of oil — or more than 2.5 million gallons — are flowing each day from the damaged well. Today, Obama and Vice President Biden will meet with BP executives, a gathering at which the President said he will tell them to “set aside whatever resources are required to compensate the workers and business owners who have been harmed as a result of [the] company’s recklessness.”

PERSONNEL CHANGES: One of Obama’s most well-received steps to address the oil spill has been appointing Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen to oversee the clean-up effort, a move that, as the Center for American Progress pointed out, established a “highly visible leader at the White House” to “lead the command and coordination at the cabinet level.” Yesterday, Obama made two other much-needed personnel announcements. First, he appointed a new head of the embattled Minerals Management Service, which, for years, was the “handmaiden” of the oil industry it was supposed to be regulating. His choice, Michael Bromwich, “has no experience with oil and gas issues, but he has a reputation for cleaning up embattled organizations,” according to the Washington Post. Second, the President tapped Navy Secretary and former Mississippi governor Ray Mabus to “develop a long-term Gulf Coast Restoration Plan as soon as possible.” These personnel plans follow Obama’s establishment last month of an independent commission to probe the spill, a step first recommended by the Center for American Progress.

COMPENSATING VICTIMS: As tar balls wash up on shore, clean-up workers become ill, and wildlife die from the mess, the public is becoming increasingly angry at BP, the company that operated the Deepwater Horizon rig. Eighty-three percent of Americans disapprove of BP’s response. Last week, BP CEO Tony Hayward came under intense criticism for claiming that the company has paid “every claim that’s been presented,” adding that it takes only 48 hours to receive a check. In reality, fewer than half of the claims have been paid. This week, the Obama administration took away some of BP’s compensation-decision authority and announced an “independently administered fund for reimbursing victims.” It also told the company to put “‘substantial’ funds into an escrow account to cover claims.” Hours before Obama’s speech last night, BP “announced it was accelerating its claims process for businesses affected by the spill — but…continued to resist the administration’s efforts to make the company pay for lost wages due to a moratorium on deepwater drilling.” Additionally, BP is reportedly already objecting to details of the escrow fund to compensate workers and businesses, with a lack of agreement on “who would administer it and whether BP shareholders would have to approve the transfer of money required for the account.”

CLEANING UP THE OIL INDUSTRY: BP isn’t alone in its malfeasance. Yesterday, executives from oil giants BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, and Shell testified before the House Energy and Commerce Committee, revealing the inadequacy of their plans for dealing with oil spills, plans which the government requires for deep-water drilling applications for the Gulf of Mexico. As the Washington Post noted, “Three of them listed the phone number for the same University of Miami marine science expert, Peter Lutz, who died in 2005. Four talked about the need to protect walruses, which, as Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) dryly noted, ‘have not called the Gulf of Mexico home for 3 million years.’ The plans also mentioned protecting sea lions and seals, which aren’t found in the gulf, either.” ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson essentially admitted to Congress that the industry has to do everything possible to prevent offshore drilling disasters, because once they occur, there is not any way to stop the damage. “When you look at the details, it becomes evident these [response] plans are just paper exercises,” said Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA).

THE NEED FOR COMPREHENSIVE ENERGY AND CLIMATE REFORM: Perhaps the part of Obama’s speech with the most long-term impact was his call for Congress to pass clean energy legislation, leading to a “transition away from fossil fuels.” “The consequences of our inaction are now in plain sight,” said the President. “Countries like China are investing in clean energy jobs and industries that should be right here in America. Each day, we send nearly $1 billion of our wealth to foreign countries for their oil. … We cannot consign our children to this future.” He praised the House for passing “a strong and comprehensive energy and climate bill” last year, but stopped short of giving any specifics. Obama never used the words “carbon,” “greenhouse gases,” “global warming” or “cap and trade,” but he did give “primetime props to Senate proposals” for a nationwide renewable electricity standard and increased energy efficiency. As the Washington Post’s Ezra Klein noted last night on Rachel Maddow’s MSNBC show, “[T]he one big thing you could see here was an echo of the health care rhetoric: that inaction’s too costly, and he won’t accept failure and he’ll listen to other solutions as long as they solve the problem. But he didn’t say what the problem was and he didn’t say what success would be.” Yet instead of agreeing to take up the challenge of energy independence, Republicans immediately slammed Obama, with Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele stating that he was “[e]xploiting the tragedy in the Gulf to try to ram through a devastating job-killing national energy tax.” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) is reportedly gathering his caucus for a meeting on Thursday “to discuss how to proceed on energy and — maybe — climate change provisions.” The Senate reportedly plans to take up a bill during the week of July 12. However, Reid’s spokesman said that a climate component would be unlikely without significant GOP support. CAP has proposed an oil reform agenda to regulate the oil industry while “moving the American economy toward a cleaner and more secure energy future.”

A message from Patty Murray


As you know, our nation is faced with a growing global demand for energy, a heavy reliance on fossil fuels, high energy prices, and environmental concerns regarding energy use.  Washington state families are struggling with energy costs in these tough economic times, and we all want a more diversified national energy policy that increases our national security by cutting our demand for foreign oil.

The Pacific Northwest has much to lose from climate change, including increasingly severe storms and rising sea levels.  Climate change will negatively impact forests, coastal and salmon habitats, and economically important farmland.  These resources define Washington state’s quality of life and help sustain the region’s economic competitiveness.  I believe American innovation will lead to real solutions to these issues, and will be an economic engine that creates millions of clean technology jobs.  Congress must adopt a comprehensive policy that promotes research and development to keep America at the cutting edge of the clean technology economy.

As you may know, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 2454, the American Clean Energy and Security Act, on June 26, 2009.  There are several energy and climate change proposals under consideration by the Senate.  Senator Bingaman (D-NM) has an energy only bill.  Senator Cantwell (D-WA) introduced a “cap and dividend” bill.  Most recently, Senators Kerry (D-MA) and Lieberman (I-CT) have unveiled a draft comprehensive climate and energy proposal that prices carbon.  I am working with my colleagues to continue to push for a comprehensive climate change and clean energy bill.

Throughout my tenure in the United States Senate, I have supported energy and climate policies that benefit consumers, encourage diversification of our nation’s energy sources and protect our fragile environment. As a member of both the Senate Budget and Appropriation Committees, I have fought for increased funding for important alternative energy research and development programs in Washington State and across the nation. In order to encourage private sector development of new forms of energy technology, I have consistently supported higher fuel economy standards for vehicles and federal tax incentives to help spur investment in wind, solar, biomass, and other renewable energy sources. I believe it is vital that Congress works to increase energy independence without sacrificing environmental protections or hurting the economy or consumers.

Energy use and climate change are two of the most critical issues facing our nation. Please be assured I will keep your views in mind as related legislation comes before the Senate for consideration. If you would like to know more about my work in the Senate, please feel free to sign up for my updates at http://murray.senate.gov/updates. Thank you again for writing, and please keep in touch.

I hope all is well in Seattle.
Sincerely,

Patty Murray
United States Senator

Fight for the whales in Morocco


Save the whales!
.Japan, Norway and Iceland have killed thousands of whales and want to kill thousands more – and now our government is supporting them!

STOP THE LIES, STOP THE SLAUGHTER
"Scientific" scam!
PLEASE DONATE TODAY


Last night I arrived in Morocco where the International Whaling Commission will shortly face a major decision to approve the slaughter of thousands of more whales.

Please support the whales and ensure that the decision is NO by making your most generous gift today.

I’m here to apply unrelenting pressure on our U.S. government delegation – to ensure that they know that Americans do not support a return to the commercial slaughter of these amazing and majestic creatures. We are making it clear that it will be a serious mistake for the President and his administration to continue to ignore public opinion on the fate of the whales.

Just two weeks ago I joined activists outside the White House where we personally delivered over 1,000,000 messages of protest to the President. We cannot compromise with countries who have abused the ban – if they’re cheating the system now, I shudder to think what they’ll do when their killing is legitimized.

Please donate today. If we’re successful in stopping this attempt to undo decades of our work, we will still need to challenge rogue countries like Japan from carrying on their illegal hunts.

For the whales,

Phil Kline
Whales Campaign Director