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Stories tagged with “George Miller

Climate Progress

George Miller: Ban BP From US Drilling

Rep. George Miller (D-CA), the former chairman of the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee, is drafting legislation to prohibit the oil disaster giant BP from drilling in the outer continental shelf for the next five to seven years. In a hearing on Wednesday with Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Michael Bromwich, the director of the new Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, Miller cited BP’s pattern of “dangerous, lethal behavior” in its refineries, pipelines, and drilling rigs in the United States. He noted that BP is expanding its offshore drilling not only into the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico but also into pristine Alaska seas:

I’m sure they have the technical capabilities to do it. What I’m concerned about is the ethics of this company and how they have performed in the past, to measure their performance in the future. I think they should be debarred from participating in the outer continental shelf for five or seven years. It will have little or no impact on the supply of fossil fuels to this country.

Watch it:

“At some point, the American people are entitled to a standard,” Miller said. His legislation “would block the Interior secretary from issuing offshore leases to a company that is determined to be a danger to workers and natural resources based on a review of records for all subsidiaries and partnerships.”

House Republicans have come to the defense of BP and bashed Miller’s proposal: “Of course, this legislation would kill jobs and lower the supply of energy produced in the U.S. as companies are barred from developing American energy resources.”

Yglesias

CAP, AEI, and Education Entrepreneurship

Seyward Darby at TNR takes note of a recent report “Stimulating Excellence: Unleashing the Power of Innovation in Education” that was done as a joint project by CAP and the American Enterprise Institute. The term “odd couple” comes up.

It is worth saying that though CAP and AEI are typically on different sides of issues, it’s not really all that odd to see CAP and AEI having some similar views on K-12 education. It’s simply not an issue where the main disagreements track the partisan divide all that closely. The controversial No Child Left Behind law was very much a joint project of Ted Kennedy (D-MA) and George Miller (D-CA) and the Bush administration. And at the same time, the opposition—from supporters of local control of schools, from teacher’s unions, from many rural states with few non-white schoolchildren, etc.—is very much a bipartisan phenomenon. That structure has basically been replicated in the think tank world with both CAP and AEI generally supportive of the that basic trajectory of policymaking while the Economic Policy Institute and the Cato Institute have been generally hostile. This is, in other words, the latest manifestation of a longstanding alignment of groups.

Meanwhile, I can’t mention education innovation without plugging “Changing the Game: The Federal Role in Supporting 21st Century Educational Innovation” by Sara Mead & Andy Rotherham.

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