Coyote Gulch's 2008 Presidential Election

 












































































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  Wednesday, April 16, 2008


Newt Gingrich (via Andrew Sullivan): "They went off the rails. That's it. They took a majority that took 16 years to build and they destroyed it ... There was a fundamental misunderstanding about how to govern. The concept of red versus blue is a tactic, not a strategy. In the long run, in order to mobilize your base, you tend to become more intense and your positions become more vitriolic, and you drive away the independents. Then you are no longer a majority."

Political Wire: "With five weeks until Kentucky's presidential primary, a new SurveyUSA poll shows Sen. Hillary Clinton on her way to a landslide victory over Sen. Barack Obama, 62% to 26%."

Political Wire: "The latest American Research Group poll in North Carolina finds Sen. Barack Obama leading Sen. Hillary Clinton, 52% to 41%. These results are essentially the same as last month's survey."

Political Wire: "A new Public Policy Polling survey in Pennsylvania shows Sen. Barack Obama edging Sen. Hillary Clinton, 45% to 42%. This is the third consecutive week the poll has showed a statistical tie."

Political Wire: "Sen. Barack Obama holds a 10-point lead over Sen. Hillary Clinton "when Democrats are asked whom they would prefer to see emerge as the party's presidential nominee," according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll."

Political Wire: "A new Insider Advantage poll in North Carolina finds Sen. Barack Obama in front of Sen. Hillary Clinton by double-digits, 51% to 36% with 13% undecided."

Political Wire: "Sen. Barack Obama has moved within striking distance of Sen. Hillary Clinton in Pennsylvania, according to a new Philadelphia Daily News/Franklin & Marshall Poll. Clinton holds a 46% to 40% lead among likely voters, with 14% still undecided. Last month, Clinton led 51% to 35%."

"2008 pres"
6:04:56 PM    


Juan Cole: "Aljazeera English reports on the increased Sunni-Shiite divide in Baghdad. The video of blast walls and closed bridges is worth the price of admission. My only puzzlement is why they did not say more about the ethnic cleansing of the Sunnis from Iraq, such that the city is now overwhelmingly Shiite."

"2008 pres"
6:02:35 PM    


A picture named coalfiredpowerplant.jpg

Here's a nifty per capita CO2 emissions map from Wired.com.

"cc"
5:58:37 PM    


A picture named 2008dncccommitteelogo.jpg

From Politics West: "In a meeting today with The Denver Post's editorial board, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said she hopes to use her hometown's hosting of the 2008 Democratic National Convention to begin to repair the United States' reputation abroad. According to a report by Denver Post reporter Chuck Plunkett, she'll start the process through a diplomatic organization she chairs, the National Democratic Institute (NDI), which expects to bring as many as 600 heads of state, prime ministers, ambassadors and party officials from 100 nations to the Denver 2008 DNC. Typically, the DNCC is able to give NDI 300 to 400 credentials that the institute uses to rotate its VIPs through key convention periods."

"2008 pres"
5:48:23 PM    


A picture named highmeadow.jpg

Here's a look at the Clean Water Restoration Act currently being bandied about in Congress, from The Denver Post. They write:

With climate change, global warming solutions and their impacts on America's waters as backdrop, Congress this month is taking a serious look at our pre-eminent water quality law - the Clean Water Act. For 31 years, the Clean Water Act protected all of the nation's waters-as Congress intended. But in 2003 the Bush administration gave in to polluter pressure and brazenly redefined the meaning of water, putting nearly 60 percent of the country's streams at risk. This means that 68 percent of Colorado's streams fell off the federal Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) map for protection under the Clean Water Act's programs. This happened through a bureaucratic device called a 'guidance," when the EPA instructed federal environmental law enforcers to back off from holding many polluters accountable. If the water they pollute happens to be a stream or river that doesn't flow year-round or directly into a bigger stream or river that can be navigated it may no longer be protected. That describes many of Colorado's isolated high mountain rivulets, which may trickle into montane wetland systems or isolated bogs which are the cradle for much of our mountain wildlife.

On April 16, a key congressional committee will take up the proposed Clean Water Restoration Act, a bipartisan bill authored by Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., and co-sponsored by Rep. Diana DeGette. Hanging in the balance at this hearing before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee-the first ever on the bill itself-are safeguards to drinking water sources for more than 111 million Americans, including more than 3.5 million Coloradans. The U.S. Senate held a hearing on the bill April 9...

The critical question before Congress is this: What do we mean when we say we want to keep ALL of our nation's water clean? Some would like to allow pollution to be dumped directly into all but the largest bodies of water. This means going against basic knowledge of how water - and pollution - moves through streams, wetlands, lakes and rivers. It also means going against what we know about the important roles healthy streams, wetlands, lakes and rivers play to help prevent flooding, filter pollutants and protect us against drought. All of these important functions will become even more critical as we are faced with the impacts of global warming. We know that increased temperatures and sea level rise will alter the water cycle, causing instances of both too much and not enough water - flooding and drought. The solution is simple. The Clean Water Restoration Act clarifies that Congress intended the Clean Water Act to protect ALL of our nation's waters. Given that water quantity and quality challenges new and old are front and center this spring, now is the time to get our clean water house in order and pass the Clean Water Restoration Act.

More Coyote Gulch coverage here and here.

"colorado water"
7:11:12 AM    



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