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Politics

Conservatives lead in earmarks.

Congressional conservatives have waged a high-profile war on earmarks this year, only to be undermined by conservatives who enjoy their pet projects. Today, Citizens Against Government Waste released their 2008 Pig Book, a database of earmarks used in the 110th Congress. The top earmarkers? Republicans:

In the House, Republicans have attacked Democratic Rep. John Murtha for delivering a pile of special-interest funds to his western Pennsylvania district.

But according to the report, two House Republicans bested Murtha: Roger Wicker of Mississippi, who recently became a U.S. senator, and Rep. Bill Young of Florida. The two scored $176.3 million and $169.5 million in earmarks respectively, beating Murtha’s $159.1 million.

In the Senate, the top three big spenders were Republicans, who together scored about $1.8 billion in home-state projects. Those senators are: Thad Cochran, the senior Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee, Richard Shelby of Alabama, and Ted Stevens of Alaska

In addition, the three House Republicans sponsoring legislation calling for a moratorium all engaged in the practice.

Update

AmericaBlog observes:

Total cost of all pork in 2008: $17.2 Billion; Cost of War in Iraq in 2008: $144 Billion

Culture

The Agony of Defeat

I’m on the road in Morgantown, West Virginia so I missed Gilbert Arenas’ dramatic return in tonight’s loss to the Bucks. Gilbert played well — 17 points on reasonably efficient shooting in 20 minutes — but precisely as one might have feared, the Wizards’ Gil-free improved defense seems to have gone missing.

Politics

Pentagon wants student directories.

The Army Times reports that the Pentagon “has announced a new get-tough policy with colleges and universities that interfere with the work of military recruiters and Reserve Officer Training Corps programs”:

Under rules that will take effect April 28, defense officials said they want the exact same access to student directories that is provided to all other prospective employers.

Students can opt out of having their information turned over to the military only if they opt out of having their information provided to all other recruiters, but schools cannot have policies that exclude only the military, defense officials said in a March 28 notice of the new policy in the Federal Register.

“The new policy is, in part, the result of a 2006 U.S. Supreme Court decision that upheld the federal government’s ability to use funding as a means of forcing equal access for military recruiters and ROTC units on campuses,” the Times adds.

Politics

U.S. military in Iraq gouged by gas prices.

The AP reports that at the same time Americans are paying more to fill their vehicles at the pumps, the U.S. military’s fuel costs in Iraq are skyrocketing:

Military units pay an average of $3.23 a gallon for gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, some $88 a day per service member in Iraq, according to an Associated Press review and interviews with defense officials. A penny or two increase in the price of fuel can add millions of dollars to U.S. costs. [...]

Overall, the military consumes about 1.2 million barrels, or more than 50 million gallons of fuel, each month in Iraq at an average $127.68 a barrel. That works out to about $153 million a month. [...]

Still, some lawmakers say the U.S. is paying too much to secure an oil-rich nation that resides in a neighborhood swimming in the natural resource.

Economy

McCain Does About-Face On Housing Rescue Bill

Our guest blogger is James Kvaal, Domestic Policy Advisor at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

mccainThat was fast.

Only days ago, McCain advisor Douglas Holtz-Eakin dismissed Sen. Chris Dodd and Rep. Barney Frank’s mortgage rescue plan – also endorsed by Sens. Clinton and Obama — as “throwing money at problems.” He said it had “the potential to do more harm than good.” Meanwhile, Sen. McCain gave a major housing speech in which he “more or less came out against aid for troubled homeowners” and his hands-off approach drew comparisons to Herbert Hoover.

That’s all changed. Yesterday, the Senate voted 94-1 to move ahead with a housing rescue bill, and now McCain’s for it too. Last night Holtz-Eakin called the Senate action “progress.” And today he said that the Dodd-Frank proposal reflected McCain’s principles and McCain may support it.

For homeowners, it’s a welcome about-face.

Politics

Coming soon: ‘George W. Bush Sewage Plant.’

SFist reports that the enterprising Presidential Memorial Commission of San Francisco is looking to rename Oceanside Wastewater Treatment Facility to the “George W. Bush Sewage Plant.” The group explains it seeks to “select a fitting monument to this president’s work” and to “honor George W Bush for his eight years of honorable public service.” “No other president in American history has accomplished so much in such a short time,” the group notes.

(HT: Huffington Post)

Politics

DOJ investigates whether Goodling forced out gay attorney.

NPR reports that the Justice Department Inspector General is investigating whether Monica Goodling, a key administration figure in the U.S. Attorney scandal, dismissed a career DOJ attorney “because of rumors that she is a lesbian“:

Justice Department e-mails obtained by NPR show that Gonzales’s senior counsel Monica Goodling had a particular interest in Hagen’s duties. A few months before Hagen was let go, according to one e-mail, Goodling removed part of Hagen’s job portfolio — the part dealing with child exploitation and abuse.

DOJ officials “said they came away with the impression that the Attorney General’s office decided not to renew Leslie Hagen’s contract because of the talk about her sexual orientation,” despite her receiving strong performance reviews.

(HT: TPM Muckraker)

Climate Progress

One Year After Global Warming Mandate, EPA Delays And Hides

johnsonOne year ago today, the Supreme Court handed down an epochal decision in the global warming case Massachusetts vs. the Environmental Protection Agency, stating that the EPA had the responsibility to determine how to regulate carbon dioxide for its contribution to global warming. The EPA, led by administrator Stephen L. Johnson, has utterly failed to do so, prompting a series of Congressional investigations and new lawsuits.

Johnson’s adversaries marked the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision today by continuing to press their case. Officials of 18 states filed suit against the EPA for its continued inaction — their petition “asks the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to require the EPA to act within 60 days.” By a unanimous vote, the House Global Warming Committee issued subpoenas “for EPA documents showing the Agency’s progress in making the ‘endangerment’ finding and proposing national emissions standards.”

The Supreme Court decision mandated that the EPA:

  • Declare whether greenhouse gases pose a threat to human health and need to be regulated;
  • Make a decision on California’s Clean Air Act petition to regulate motor vehicle greenhouse gas emissions;
  • Propose federal regulations for motor vehicle greenhouse emissions.

In the past year, EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson has only completed one of those tasks, by denying California’s waiver petition following the signing of the 2007 Energy Act in December.

Investigations by Congress, though repeatedly stymied by the agency, have determined that EPA staff actually worked vigorously last year to meet the Court mandate. In late fall Johnson brought the complete package with a health endangerment finding, approval of the California waiver, and motor vehicle regulations to the White House. After that, Johnson issued his waiver denial and all work at the EPA on the issue ceased. Henry Waxman, chair of the House Oversight Committee, has vigorously pursued documents related to the California waiver denial, even as the EPA responds to his subpoenas with document requests of their own.

Johnson’s latest act was to declare last week that the EPA would release an “Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking” asking for new round of comments, a delaying tactic promoted by a “memo from the Heritage Foundation.”

He is now fleeing to Australia with his top staff for two weeks to discuss the “ongoing environmental collaboration” between the countries — and fortuitously delay further Congressional hearings. The $280,000 trip is taxpayer-funded.

Politics

Karl Rove Claims The Economy Is Only ‘Apparently Struggling’

Last night on Fox News’ On The Record with Greta Van Susteren, former top adviser to President Bush Karl Rove said that Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) “faces a tough general election in the midst of a war and a struggling economy.” But recognizing that he veered away from “Republican spin,” Rove quickly corrected himself, saying “or apparently struggling economy”:

ROVE: And Senator McCain, who faces a tough general election in the midst of a war and a struggling economy, or apparently struggling economy, has got to be very careful about not looking to distance himself but to differentiate himself [from Bush].

Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2008/04/RoveBernankeEconomy.320.240.flv]

But the facts stand in stark contrast to Rove’s spin. In addition to the wide range of indicators pointing to an economic downturn, it’s “hard to find an economist who doesn’t believe the US is either in recession or so close it’s not worth arguing about” as a recent Wall Street Journal poll of economists found.

In fact, during a Joint Economic Committee hearing today on Capitol Hill, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke “acknowledged for the first time that a U.S. recession is possible“:

It now appears likely that real gross domestic product will not grow much, if at all, over the first half of 2008 and could even contract slightly.

While Rove has previously blamed the media for the sagging economy, today his Fox News brethren picked up where he left off. This morning, Fox and Friends wondered if talk of recession is a “media myth.” During the segment, co-host Steve Doocy suggested that there are perhaps some “liberal elements” in the media who are downplaying the economy because “they are trying to get a Democrat in the White House.”

Perhaps Rove thinks the economy is only “apparently struggling” because his lucrative post-White House speaking career doesn’t allow him to feel any of its negative effects.

Climate Progress

Shame on Nature for quoting someone on behalf of Pielke without noting they’re colleagues!

Suppose the prestigious journal Nature published an analysis of mine that they knew many people would disagree with. How would you feel if Nature then wrote an accompanying news story about the commentary that quoted people for and against my analysis, including another Senior Fellow from the Center for American Progress (CAP) raving about how important and brilliant my analysis was? You’d probably think that was kind of lame of them.

Now suppose the Nature article never mentioned that I was a CAP Senior Fellow or that my mysterious admirer was, either. No way, you say. No way a journal like Nature would ever do that. That would be like the New York Times asking a CAP Fellow to review my book and not mentioning the connection. Few things could be more inappropriate for a major publication. I have one word for you — “way!”

Yes, amazingly, Nature did just that — twice! — with the Pielke et al. piece that I have previously debunked. Here you can read the Pielke piece, “Dangerous Assumptions.” Note Pielke is identified at the end simply as “Roger Pielke Jr is in the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0488, USA.”

Online, Nature has an article (subs. req’d) “Climate challenge underestimated?” on the Pielke et al. piece in which we are told:

“The paper is a bombshell,” says Marty Hoffert, former chair of the Department of Applied Science at New York University. “It explodes the idea that sufficient technology exists to solve the climate and energy problem, and that global warming can be dealt with by market incentives.”

[I like Marty, but in fact the Pielke paper provides no evidence whatsoever to refute the two notions that "sufficient technology exists to solve the climate and energy problem, and that global warming can be dealt with by market incentives." It doesn't address those issues at all.]

In print, Nature has yet another news article on Pielke et al. — [so much coverage for so little substance] — optimistically titled “Are the IPCC scenarios ‘unachievable’?” (available here). As you can plainly see on the second page, we again hear the ever-so-unexpected praise from Hoffert:

Marty Hoffert, former chair of the Department of Applied Science, New York University:
This analysis is long overdue. We’re under a delusion that we will solve the problem of climate change casually. But what we have — cap-and-trade systems and the like — is plainly insufficient. We need a massive engineering effort, the size of the Manhattan Project.”

[Note to Hoffert: A few people may have that delusion -- such as Senator McCain and his advisors -- but certainly not readers of this blog. And the engineering effort we need is much closer in size to all of World War II -- the Manhattan project is way too puny. Hoffert should know that.]

But guess what — both Hoffert and Pielke are in fact Fellows at the Breakthrough Institute (as you can see here). Gosh, Hoffert thinks Pielke’s stuff is great. Who would have ever guessed? And what is the Breakthrough Institute? Why it’s the brainchild of everybody’s favorite technology-breakthrough lovers, Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus. [Note to Shellenberger and Nordhaus: Your love of technology breakthroughs appears to be unrequited.]

So shame on Nature for quoting Hoffert in praise of Pielke in the first place and double shame for not letting readers know they work at the same place–a place that happens to be dedicated to promoting the very (mistaken) idea at the center of Pielke’s piece (namely that “Enormous advances in energy technology will be needed to stabilize atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations at acceptable levels”).

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