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Climate Progress

Obama calls for more energy investments while proposing to cut deficit $4 trillion

Slams GOP for a “vision of our future that’s deeply pessimistic.”

President Obama promised today to trim the federal deficit by $4 trillion over a dozen years through new spending cuts, tax hikes and tax reform. But one thing he said he wouldn’t do is stop investing in clean energy.

Obama gave his big deficit reduction speech today (text “as prepared for delivery” here).  One of his harshest economic critics, Nobelist Paul Krugman, liked the style — and on substance said it was “Much better than many of us feared.”

On energy it was pretty good too.  As E&E News (subs. req’d) reports:

Read more

LGBT

State LGBT Watch: Adoption Defeat In LA, Distress In IL, And Uncertainty In VA

Same-sex adoption is the hot topic in various states this week, as Louisiana, Illinois, and Virginia all wrestle with the issue in different ways:

- DELAWARE: Today the House Administration Committee released the civil unions bill passed last week by the Senate, allowing it to proceed to a full House vote. Meanwhile, opponents of the bill are promoting harmful “ex-gay” rhetoric.

- HAWAII: The Hawaii Senate has passed a House bill that would provide transgender employment protections. The amended bill returns to the House for final consideration.

- ILLINOIS: Fulfilling their end of an apparent backroom deal to get Catholic Democrats’ support for civil unions, several Senators pushed a provision this week that would have protected religious charities’ ability to discriminate against same-sex couples in adoption and foster care services. The amendment failed in a committee vote today.

- LOUISIANA: An en banc decision by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a previous decision allowing a same-sex couple to have both their names on their son’s birth certificate. The couple has not made a decision yet on whether to appeal.

- MAINE: State Rep. Ken Fredette (R) is pushing a bill that would reopen discrimination against transgender individuals in public accommodations (like bathrooms and lockerrooms) by requiring they use facilities that match their biological sex.

- MARYLAND: The Senate killed a bill that would have ended discrimination against transgender Marylanders by sending it back to committee on the last day of the legislative session.

- NEVADA: The Senate Commerce and Labor Committee advanced a bill last week that would protect transgender Nevadans from discrimination in public accommodations and housing.

- TENNESSEE: A bill nullifying and preventing municipal nondiscrimination ordinances (such as the one Nashville just passed) continues to see progress, passing this week out of the House Commerce Committee. Meanwhile, the Senate today saw the introduction of the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, which would prohibit elementary and middle schools from acknowledging the existence of gender variation or any sexual orientation except heterosexuality.

- TEXAS: An anti-bullying bill advanced out of the Texas House Committee on Public Education yesterday, though it does not specifically protect LGBT youth.

- VIRGINIA: All eyes are on Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) as the deadline approaches this week for him to make recommendations to the Virginia State Board of Social Services about a provision that would allow same-sex couples to adopt children. He has indicated he opposes the provision.

Keep track of how LGBT issues are advancing in the states at our State LGBT Watch.

Politics

Texas GOP Rep. Introduces Sharia Ban Because He Heard Sharia Is A Threat On The Radio, Asks ‘Isn’t That True?’

Texas is now joining over 15 states that have introduced bills to guard against the non-existent threat of Islamic Sharia law. In proposing legislation to ban state courts from considering foreign religious or cultural laws like Sharia, Texas state Rep. Leo Berman (R) — the bill sponsor — said, “We want to prevent it from ever happening in Texas.”

Berman insisted one U.S. city offered unquestionable proof of this supposed threat: Dearborn, MI. Dearborn is home to one of the largest Muslim populations and the largest mosque in North America. Therefore, according to Berman, Sharia law necessarily is being implemented there. “It’s being done in Dearborn, Mich., because of a large population of Middle Easterners,” Berman said, “and the judges in Dearborn are using and allowing to be used Sharia law.” He mentioned the city six times throughout his testimony. However, when pushed for details, the only actual evidence Berman could offer was, “I heard it on a radio station”:

Rep. Berman himself acknowledged knowing nothing about Dearborn.

I heard it on a radio station here on my way in to the Capitol one day,” Berman said Monday in an interview. “I don’t know Dearborn, Michigan but I heard it (Sharia is accepted law here) on the radio. Isn’t that true?

No, says Dearborn Mayor Jack O’Reilly (D), who must repeatedly debunk Islamophobic theories about the city. “These people know nothing of Dearborn and they just seek to provoke and enflame their base for political gain,” he said. But such cultural ignorance doesn’t stop “Dearborn-Sharia theorists” from citing the city as proof of a Muslim threat. Likely GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich cited the arrest of four Christian missionaries during a Dearborn Arab festival as an example of “radical Islamism” to argue against the Islamic Center in New York City. Perpetual candidate Sharron Angle (R-NV) said Dearborn faces “militant terrorist situation” and is ruled by Sharia law.

But even Berman, who is no stranger to outlandish extremism, must realize “I heard it on a radio station” fails as evidence for anything. Unless, of course, he’s planning an anti-Martian bill in response to War of the Worlds.

Security

Recall Drive Leaders ‘Absolutely Positive’ They Will Put Russell Pearce Back On The Ballot

Earlier this year, Citizens for a Better Arizona (CBA) — a “coalition of concerned citizens committed to improving the quality of life of all Arizonans” — filed paperwork with the Arizona state Secretary of State’s Office to start a recall drive against state Senate President Russell Pearce (R). As the coalition nears its May 31 deadline, CBA claims that it’s confident it will obtain the 7,756 signatures needed to put Pearce back on the ballot. A local Phoenix news station reports:

He was called “politically invincible,” but a recall effort against State Senate President Russell Pearce has quickly picked up in steam in Mesa. The people leading the effort have already collected thousands of signatures and they’re two-thirds of the way to the amount they need to trigger a recall election. [...]

In the aftermath of SB 1070, Russell Pearce’s popularity seemed to skyrocket. But then his own party members turned against him to defeat his latest immigration bills, word got out that he allegedly banned members of the public from the Capitol, and blocked the media from the chamber — and then add to that the scandal surrounding free football game tickets provided by the Fiesta Bowl and a potential ethics investigation — and Russell Pearce may have a problem.

Watch it:

Movement to Recall Sen. Russell Pearce Gains Momentum: MyFoxPHOENIX.com

Snow also indicated that he is “absolutely positive” the group will get all of the signature it needs to force an election.

Pearce has dismissed recall backs as an “open border crowd.” “Their agenda is open borders. I don’t know how can they ignore the damage to our country,” he stated in February. “They think it’s OK to break our law and be rewarded for it.” Back then, he felt confident that most people in his district support his views, but “you take everything serious.” That was before news broke that he may have illegally accepted thousands of dollars worth of Fiesta Bowl tickets. Since the beginning of the year, Pearce also foolishly wasted the Arizona legislature’s time on a flurry of far-right immigration bills after promising his colleagues that he would use his position to focus on the economy.

Some political analysts have warned Citizens for a Better Arizona about the potential effects of a successful recall drive. According to them, Pearce may still prove hard to beat in a second election. If he wins again, he may see it as yet another mandate. Yet, that may just be a risk worth taking.

Politics

CBO: Budget Deal Cuts ‘Less Than 1 Percent’ Of The $38.5 Billion Claimed

Republicans and President Obama have been hailing last week’s shutdown-averting government funding deal as the “largest spending cut in history,” but as details about the package emerged, analysts realized that deal’s supporters were greatly overselling the purported $38.5 billion in cuts. And today, the Congressional Budget Office finds that the deal would shave just $352 million from the deficit in the next six months — “less than 1 percent of the $38 billion in claimed savings,” the AP reports:

The Congressional Budget Office estimate shows that compared with current spending rates the spending bill due for a House vote Thursday would pare just $352 million from the deficit through Sept. 30. About $8 billion in cuts to domestic programs and foreign aid are offset by nearly equal increases in defense spending. [...]

The CBO study confirms that the measure trims $38 billion in new spending authority, but many of the cuts come in slow-spending accounts like water-and-sewer grants that don’t have an immediate deficit impact.

While the CBO study lends credence to the theory that President Obama slyly deflected the worst of the cuts, the fact remains that the cuts will be harmful to the economy and to the people who depend on valuable social safety net programs that will have their budgets cut. Moreover, as the Wonk Room’s Ben Armbruster explains, the deal also leaves defense spending largely untouched. So while the deal cuts domestic social spending, much of these savings are wiped out by inflated defense spending.

Yglesias

Endgame

La vie est un long chemin:

— The Fed’s huge profits.

— Barack Obama has “an aspiration to cut $400 billion by 2023, which is pretty much meaningless in a world of half-trillion annual defense budgets and wars that cost an additional $150-plus billion.”

— Student loan debt is a growing business.

— Sarah Laskow smears Joey Potter.

George W Bush in 2001: “At the end of those 10 years, we will have paid down all the debt that is available to retire.”

My country is weirdly obsessed with hypothetical debt crises. But Yelle’s “Mon Pays” makes me feel better.

LGBT

NOM Won’t Back Notion That Homosexuality Is Health Risk, Claim No Concern Over Defecting Strategist

On Monday, ThinkProgress spoke to National Organization for Marriage’s (NOM) Brian Brown at the FAMiLY Leader’s Presidential Lecture Series with Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN). Brown said that NOM was “helping sponsor” the events, but — like Bachmann — would not endorse the group’s controversial view that homosexuality was akin to second hand smoking:

VOLSKY: One of the things that the FAMiLY Leader has come under fire for is arguing that homosexuality is a health risk. They’ve likened it to second hand smoke. What’s your view on all that?

BROWN: Again, people can have different opinions about the nature of homosexuality, what its effects are. Our focus at the National Organization for Marriage is directly on the marriage issue. There are people who are openly gay that support our position….but what we do is bring all of those people together under one umbrella to support marriage as a union between one man and one woman.

Brown then went on to say that he receives emails from gay people all the time, saying that they oppose their own right to marry. Watch it:

Brown also responded to the recent declaration of NOM strategist and organizer Louis Marinelli that he now supports same-sex marriage. Describing Marinelli as “a bus driver” who “was never an employee of NOM,” Brown said, “people can choose what position they want on marriage. The bus driver on tour has decided that he would like to redefine marriage. This is a free country and we’re going to continue. It has very little effect on us. We’re going to continue standing up for marriage.”

Since defecting, Marinelli — who actually worked as a contractor for the group and had originated the marriage tour idea — has begun raising money for the Courage Campaign and has forced the group to establish a new Facebok page.

Economy

Walker And Prosser Crushed Regulations On Koch Industry’s Phosphorus Pollution In Wisconsin

Shortly after helping to elect Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI), Koch Industries opened a new lobbying office in Madison near the state capitol. However, little has been disclosed about the Koch lobbying agenda in Madison. The New York Times reported that Koch political operatives privately pressured Walker to crush public employee unions. But Walker’s major payback to Koch relates to environmental deregulation.

ThinkProgress has learned that the Walker administration, along with state Supreme Court judge David Prosser, has quietly worked to allow Koch’s many Georgia Pacific paper plants to pollute Wisconsin by pouring thousands of pounds of phosphorus into the water.

Koch’s Georgia Pacific plants are well known for releasing large amounts of phosphorus into Wisconsin’s waterways. A report by the state government showed that Georgia Pacific is responsible for about 9% of total phosphorus pollution in the Lower Fox River near Green Bay.

In 2005, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources’ (DNR) issued a permit to Koch’s Georgia Pacific company to nearly double its phosphorus pollution in the Fox River. A group of Wisconsin citizens challenged the permit the following year, claiming the DNR’s permit violated the Clean Water Act. In 2010, the Wisconsin Third District Court of Appeals ruled that the public has a right to challenge the permit, and that the DNR did not appropriately hold public hearings. Around the same time, the Wisconsin Natural Resources Board adopted “sweeping regulations” to control phosphorus pollution to slow down “runaway algae growth.”

To fight the challenge to the permit, as well as new regulations on phosphorus, Koch’s close allies in the Walker administration and the Wisconsin Supreme Court went into action:

Rewriting Environmental Regulations For Koch: Last year, the Wisconsin Natural Resources Board called for strict numeric limits on phosphorus pollution. The regulations, which were supposed to be implemented in January, were delayed by Walker’s administration. Hidden inside his infamous budget bill passed in March, Walker then inserted a provision to revise and reduce the phosphorus limits proposed by the Natural Resources Board. Walker’s budget bill was rushed through the legislative process without public hearings.

Ruling In Favor Of Koch And Other Polluters: In March, the Wisconsin Supreme Court, with Justice David Prosser voting with the majority, overturned the lower court decision allowing a public challenge to the permit giving Koch’s Georgia Pacific plants more leeway in dumping phosphorus into waterways.

Delaying Environmental Regulations For Koch: Earlier this month, the Walker administration announced a two year delay of all phosphorus regulations passed last year. Not only has Walker’s administration called for reduced phosphorus dumping rules, they now have made it clear that no rules will be implemented until 2013.

During this three month period of Koch-enriching policy and legal action, the Koch political largesse has flowed to both Walker and Prosser. The Koch political machine spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in ads supporting Walker during the budget showdown, organized pro-Walker Tea Party rallies, and mobilized a pro-Walker bus tour. During his recent reelection campaign, Prosser too was boosted by two Koch-linked groups, Citizens for a Strong America and Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, which ran about $1 million in advertising. A top Georgia Pacific executive overseeing plants responsible for dumping phosphorus in the Fox River sits on the board of the pro-Posser group, Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce.

Yglesias

Food Trucks And Clean Energy

I’m obsessed with the strides municipalities have made in facilitating the development of a food truck sector, and a great example of the utility of such a thing comes from this notice for the weekend’s Power Shift conference:

Food Trucks

From Korean BBQ, to Cupcakes, to Pizza, to Vegan Delights, the DC Food truck community heard about Power Shift and will be out in full force around the Washington Convention Center. You can track their movements at www.FoodTruckFiesta.com, and look out for updates on the display screens about specific food truck locations and twitter updates.

Delicious! The Convention Center area is a few blocks away from the downtown core where there’s high demand for lunch Monday through Friday. Consequently, the lunch options in the immediate vicinity are sometimes a bit scarce. But food trucks have the flexibility to be there on the weekend, and then go where weekend demand is highest during the week.

For a more substantive take on Power Shift, please read my colleague Brad Johnson.

Security

AP Claims That Those ‘Insistent On Cutting Military Spending’ Will Find ‘Plenty To Like’ In Budget Deal

The Associated Press has a write-up today on defense and foreign aid cuts in the budget deal Congress and the White House reached last week which appears to come to the conclusion that it was a big victory for those calling for a reduction in military spending:

Tea partyers insistent on cutting military spending and foreign aid will find plenty to like in the deal struck by President Barack Obama and congressional leaders. [...]

The hard-fought deal negotiated by the president, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., calls for $513 billion for defense, a cut of $18.1 billion from what the administration envisioned but $5 billion more than last year’s amount. War costs for Iraq and Afghanistan would be covered separately at a cost of $158 billion.

Except there’s one problem. The budget deal didn’t cut $18.1 billion in military spending from what the Obama administration envisioned. Defense Secretary Robert Gates called for at least $540 billion for FY2011 and this budget deal funds DOD “just north of $530 billion” a figure that includes military construction, which the AP seems to have left out. Thus, as Defense News noted yesterday, “defense spending is left relatively untouched” in this budget deal. Moreover, as the AP correctly noted, the overall baseline budget is an increase of $5 billion from last year. How would deficit and debt hawks find “plenty to like” in that?

The AP also ignores the lopsided nature of the deal’s DOD spending versus State Department and foreign aid cuts. The $8.4 billion cut to the foreign affairs budget represents a 14 percent reduction. If the budget deal subjected DOD to the same level, the Pentagon would have lost nearly $80 billion. And while the AP highlighted some of the military programs that would be scrapped — many of which came with strong bipartisan and Pentagon support — it largely ignored how reductions in foreign affairs spending will effect U.S. diplomacy. CAP’s Sarah Margon has some details:

[C]hopping off $122 million from the U.S. Agency for International Development’s operating expenses and more than $1.4 billion from the State Department’s Economic Support Fund may cost us the ability to help critical countries transition to democracy, including Egypt and Tunisia. Turning our back on such assistance now is particularly problematic given how vulnerable nascent democracies in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as elsewhere, are to upheaval and violence.

“Democracy is about compromise. But it’s also about maintaining balance amidst evolving priorities,” Margon notes, adding, “Government officials patting themselves on the back for reaching a compromise budget that does nothing to address the bloat in military spending would do well to remember that.”

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