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Friday, April 29, 2011

Pump Pain, Big Oil Gain: Oil Companies Post Massive Profits in the First Quarter on the Backs of Americans

This article was published by the Center for American Progress.

By Valeri Vasquez

Download Big Oil quarterly profits versus oil prices in nominal and real dollars (.xls)

The first anniversary of the BP fatal oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico reminded Americans of the enormous human and economic costs of our oil dependence. One year later, BP is posting first-quarter profits of nearly $5.5 billion. This 17 percent growth from 2010’s first-quarter earnings comes despite BP having distributed a mere 19 percent of the $20 billion it agreed to pay oil spill victims and their families.

The four other Big Oil companies—ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, Chevron, and Shell—also enjoyed massive profits in the first quarter of 2011 compared to 2010 due to high oil prices. These four companies reported a combined $18.2 billion in first-quarter earnings—profits that together mark a 40 percent increase over last year. Exxon stood head and shoulders above the rest with a nearly 70 percent increase over 2010 first-quarter profits, clocking in at nearly $10.7 billion. Shell was a distant second with earnings listed at $6.9 billion.

Oil prices have risen by a third in just more than two months, spurred largely by speculators capitalizing on unrest in North Africa and the Middle East. The jump in crude prices from $85 per barrel to $112 per barrel since January 2011 has boosted gasoline prices by 22 percent.

President Barack Obama warned in an April 26 letter to congressional leadership that "if sustained, these high prices have the potential to slow our economy’s growth at precisely the moment we need to be accelerating it."

Analysts agree, projecting that a sustained $10 increase in the cost of a barrel of oil can reduce our gross domestic product by up to 0.2 percentage points in 2011 alone. A sustained $20-per-barrel increase in oil prices could yield at least a 50-cent-per-gallon hike in gasoline costs.

This month, drivers are paying an additional 30 percent at the pump compared to April 2010. And this year, an increase of 70 cents per gallon in just more than two months is costing American families dearly. According to some estimates, every “penny increase at the pump sucks $1.5 billion from household spending nationwide.”

Big Oil doesn’t need tax subsidies with billions in profits

But the burden on American taxpayers begins well before they fill up at the gas station. More than $4 billion in unnecessary tax subsidies for domestic drilling and production are doled out to oil companies annually, activities the companies would undertake and profit from without federal assistance.

The handout is supported by Big Oil’s Republican representatives in Congress. House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan’s (R-WI) proposed fiscal year 2012 budget resolution that passed the House of Representatives on April 15 preserves Big Oil subsidies while nearly eliminating investments in the clean energy technologies of the future that are essential to reduce oil use and foster long-term economic growth.

The House Republicans also unanimously opposed and defeated a “motion to recommit” a short-term extension of government funding for FY 2011 in March. The motion would have eliminated these Big Oil tax loopholes.

Big Oil strongly supports the retention of these tax loopholes, of course. Four of the five Big Oil companies have already shown their appreciation to House Republican leaders who led efforts to retain them. These companies gave $280,000 in campaign contributions to their Republican benefactors. This includes House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), who according to a Center for American Progress analysis has received $15,000 from oil interests since January. ExxonMobil was the largest overall donor to overall campaign contributions. It gave more than 80 percent of this campaign cash.

Speaker Boehner, however, indicated a willingness to consider eliminating Big Oil tax loopholes on Monday. He told ABC News:

We're in a time when the federal government is short on revenues. We need to control spending but we need to have revenues to keep the government movin'. And they [Big Oil] oughta be payin' their fair share.

President Obama wrote Speaker Boehner and other congressional leaders in response, urging them to "take immediate action to eliminate unwarranted tax breaks for the oil and gas industry, and to use those dollars to invest in clean energy to reduce our dependence on foreign oil."

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) wants to make the repeal of the Big Oil tax loopholes one of the first orders of business when Congress returns from its spring recess on May 2. Hopefully Speaker Boehner will ignore his oil contributors and instead join along by promptly allowing a House vote on Rep. Earl Blumenauer’s (D-OH) bill, H.R. 601, which would eliminate Big Oil tax loopholes.

This quarter’s $18.2 billion in profits certainly demonstrates that the big five oil companies can do without $40 billion in tax subsidies over a decade.

Download Big Oil quarterly profits versus oil prices in nominal and real dollars (.xls)

Valeri Vasquez is a Special Assistant for the Energy Team at American Progress.



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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Chief Offshore Drilling Regulator Criticizes Lack of Oversight for Contractors

by Sasha Chavkin, ProPublica

The top regulator of offshore drilling said this week that his agency is exploring expanding its oversight to include thousands of contractors on offshore rigs. The majority of offshore oil workers in the Gulf of Mexico are contractors and their central role in safety issues came into focus after last year's Gulf oil spill . BP had leased the Deepwater Horizon rig from the contractor Transocean and relied on the contractor Halliburton to provide casing for the Macondo well.

The government currently regulates only operators of offshore drilling rigs, such as BP, and in turn holds them responsible for any contractors they hire. Experts say that by delegating the supervision of contractors the government is essentially taking the word of rig operators that facilities are safe and comply with regulation.

As Reuters reported, the director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement , Michael Bromwich, first raised the issue Monday , saying he thinks his agency has the authority to oversee contractors and that he intends to do so.

Brownwich expanded on his comments Tuesday at a recruiting event at Columbia University attended by a ProPublica reporter. "It makes absolutely no sense to me why we should not regulate contractors as well as operators," said Bromwich. "Historically we have only gone against the operator. My question is: why?"

Overseeing contractors could drastically expand Bromwich's mandate, and it's not clear whether his agency has sufficient resources to do it.

In the Gulf of Mexico, almost all of the personnel involved in offshore oil exploration are contractors, said Robert Bea, an engineering professor at Berkeley who specializes in offshore drilling. For oil production, Bea said, the proportion of offshore workers employed by operators varies significantly depending upon the site and the operating company, ranging from 20 percent to 60 percent.

Bea said he was concerned that regulators lack the staff and technical knowledge to take on what would be the sweeping new responsibility. "You need to have greater experience, knowledge and expertise than the entity that is being regulated," he said. The agency "has no such expertise."

Others have stressed that any changes must be implemented carefully so as not to allow drill operators to evade any responsibility.

"It's important to maintain the accountability, the responsibility, the authority of the primary leaseholder and permit holder and not allow that to be diffused," Bob Simon, staff director for the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, said on an April 15 conference call . The current approach has a chain of command and accountability that leads directly to the operator, Simon said.

Melissa Schwartz, spokeswoman for the offshore drilling regulator, emphasized that Bromwich's proposal "would in no way change the responsibility of operators." But she said her agency was still reviewing critical aspects of how the new system would work, including whether federal inspectors would examine additional facilities themselves or simply obtain greater authority to hold contractors responsible for violations.

The agency is also beefing up its enforcement capacity and hiring more inspectors as well as personnel for a new environmental compliance unit. It plans to hire 33 staffers for the environmental enforcement unit by the end of the 2012 fiscal year, as well as 24 new inspectors as funding permits, Schwartz said.

There are currently 60 inspectors charged with oversight for about 3,500 drilling rigs and pumping platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Bromwich told the Columbia graduate students who attended Tuesday's recruiting meeting that he was making new hires to carry out his agency's growing regulatory mandate.

"You're looking for an interesting new job," Bromwich told the students. "How would you like to be an environmental cop?"


Think Again: The Folly of the Time 100

This article was published by the Center for American Progress

By Eric Alterman


It happens every spring—or at least has done so now for the past eight years. Time publishes a special issue in which it names the 100 most influential people in the world and then throws a party to celebrate how special it makes everybody feel to be part of it.

I don’t mind the party. Advertisers are an insecure lot and need to be stroked, even if they’re not invited to sit at the cool table with Chris Matthews, Jonathan Franzen, and Patti Smith. What I do mind, however, is the “program” they print to go with the dinner, which is treated everywhere else as a copy of an actual edition of the newsweekly Time, with real journalism and everything.

The Time 100, however, is the opposite of journalism. It is a series of pre-packaged lies and public relations exercises that, in many cases, are unlikely even to be authored by the people claiming the bylines. Were they to be taken seriously, they would fall afoul of every conflict-of-interest rule known to the profession (and a few they may have invented on their own).

I wrote about last year’s issue, focusing on the oddity in particular of inviting Ted Nugent to lie on behalf of Sarah Palin. But even the adoring profiles that did not lie—or were not written by lunatics—still enjoyed zero journalistic value, and were useful or significant only to the people who got to put framed copies of their alleged wonderfulness on the walls of their studies.

Well, why mess with a formula that apparently works? I loved Amy Adams in Mark Wahlberg’s Christmas flick, “The Fighter,” which garnered her an Oscar nomination, losing only to Melissa Leo in the same film. If you knew Amy, might you expect that she might hope to work with Wahlberg again? If so, is it likely that she—or her publicist—would say anything in Time that had not been previously vetted by Wahlberg’s PR people?

Let’s see. According to Adams’s tribute to Wahlberg: He’s apparently “good-looking, a commanding presence, and a casual swagger that can only be associated with true confidence.” Check. Has “deeper character.” Check. Is “insightful, instinctual and extremely funny.” Check. He “never shies away from the truth.” Check. And “puts people at ease with his honesty, because people will always respond to truth.” Gotcha. He’s “a powerhouse … a work ethic that is incomparable. He is where he is because of his hard work, his talent and his sheer force of will. I have no doubt that he can and will accomplish anything he sets his mind to. I can't wait to see what's next.”

I’ll bet she can’t.

The issue is filled with these sorts of conflicts. Did you expect Defense Secretary Gates to tell you anything about David Petraeus that is not straight out of the Pentagon propaganda desk?

Does the secretary of defense really take time out of his day to pen an essay for Time magazine when he has staff of, I dunno, thousands and thousands of subordinates for that kind of thing? And what of Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s encomium from Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels? How hard-hitting is that one? Hmmm, “forcefulness … candor … delightfully free of the self-importance.”

What else? Weekly Standard editor Andrew Ferguson pens a love letter to the Koch brothers? Once again, it turns out these fellas are as innocent as the driven snow. “There's been nothing furtive or underhanded about their efforts,” Ferguson assures us. Just ignore absolutely everything in this intensely reported article that was recently nominated for a National Magazine Award, along with pretty much every honest article ever written on the topic.

Well, at least Ferguson is a pro at this kind of thing. Where is this year’s equivalent of Ted Nugent snuggling up to Sarah Palin? Well, this year’s Sarah Palin, you might have guessed, is Michele Bachmann. And the writer to take a good, hard journalistic accounting of her strengths and weaknesses? You guessed it. Rush Limbaugh.

Rush doesn’t mind admitting that he is “a great admirer of Michele Bachmann's,” as she is “a strong spokeswoman for unapologetic conservatism. She is neither extreme nor unreasonable, which is why her philosophy has resonated with grassroots conservatives.” Problem is, says El Rushbo, that “she's conservative. So because she is smart, talented and accomplished and a natural leader—not to mention attractive—the left brands her as a flame-throwing lightweight.”

I don’t suppose the problem could be that Bachmann is also an idiot. She thinks the Revolutionary War began in New Hampshire, not Massachusetts. She thinks the U.S. Constitution abolished slavery. She thinks slaves came to America because they were “risk takers … people that wanted a better life and were willing to do what it took to get it." She thinks something called the "Hoot-Smalley Tariff," allegedly passed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt, caused the Depression. She doesn’t know what years Jimmy Carter was president of the United States and thinks he had something to do with the spread of swine flu that happened during the presidency that preceded him. And she’s pretty sure that global warming is “all voodoo, nonsense, hokum, a hoax."

The fact that Time had to go all the way to Limbaugh to get someone to say nice things about her is perhaps significant. I see that a fellow named John K. Wilson has written a new book about Limbaugh, and found that just last Friday Limbaugh fabricated quotes during a racist rant attacking black people and President Obama. According to Wilson, “During his Good Friday rant, Limbaugh complained that Obama had failed because ‘white people are not shining the shoes of black people.’ Limbaugh backed up this racist claim with the assertion that he had audiotape of ‘black people’ at a 2009 Obama town hall in Florida saying, ‘From now on you all are gonna be waiting on us.’”

Yeah, right.

Following an extensive search, Wilson found no evidence that any such comment had ever been made, and no earlier references to it by Limbaugh. Wilson also notes that for more than two years, Limbaugh has been making up fake quotes to smear a homeless woman, Henrietta Hughes, who spoke to Obama at that town hall. Limbaugh has falsely claimed several times that Hughes demanded a new car from Obama, which apparently never happened.

Of course, many books have been written about Limbaugh before. (I wrote about one here.) But none of them apparently convinced Time that a lying racist provocateur would not make a great correspondent to profile a potential presidential candidate.

This week, as Washington insiders gather to applaud themselves in lunch after brunch after party after dinner after cocktails for the annual spring rite of the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, turning much of our political world into a living version of Time’s mindless celebrity celebration, the magazine returns to genuine journalism with a profile of FBI Director Robert Mueller by star reporter Barton Gelman. Too bad nothing of importance that the rest of us noncelebrities need to know happened the week before.

Eric Alterman is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress and a Distinguished Professor of English at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism. He is also a columnist for The Nation, The Forward, and The Daily Beast. His newest book is Kabuki Democracy: The System vs. Barack Obama.






Tuesday, April 26, 2011

In Gitmo Opinion, Two Versions of Reality

by Dafna Linzer, ProPublica

Update April 25, 2011: On Sunday night, a number of news outlets and WikiLeaks published a trove of classified documents on detainees at Guantanamo Bay. ProPublica has been reporting on Gitmo and the issues surrounding indefinite detention for more than two years. In October 2010, Dafna Linzer revealed how the Obama administration censored one federal judge's Gitmo decision that had questioned the government's evidence against a detainee.

This story was co-published with The National Law Journal.

When Judge Henry Kennedy Jr. ordered the release of a Guantánamo Bay detainee last spring, the case appeared to be a routine setback for an Obama administration that has lost a string of such cases.


But there turns out to be nothing ordinary about the habeas case brought by Uthman Abdul Rahim Mohammed Uthman, a Yemeni held without charges for nearly eight years. Uthman, accused by two U.S. administrations of being an al-Qaida fighter and bodyguard for Osama bin Laden, is among 48 detainees the Obama administration has deemed too dangerous to release but "not feasible for prosecution."

A day after his March 16 order was filed on the court's electronic docket, Kennedy's opinion vanished. Weeks later, a new ruling appeared in its place. While it reached the same conclusion, eight pages of material had been removed, including key passages in which Kennedy dismantled the government's case against Uthman.

In his first opinion, Kennedy wrote that one government witness against Uthman had been diagnosed by military doctors as "psychotic" with a mental condition that made his allegations against other detainees "unreliable." But the opinion the public sees makes no mention of the man's health and discounts his testimony only because of its inconsistencies.

The alterations are extensive. Sentences were rewritten. Footnotes that described disputes and discrepancies in the government's case were deleted. Even the date and circumstances of Uthman's arrest were changed. In the first version, the judge said Uthman was detained on Dec. 15, 2001, in Pakistan by Pakistani authorities. Rewritten, Kennedy said in the public opinion that Uthman admitted being captured "in late 2001 in the general vicinity of Tora Bora," the cave complex where bin Laden was thought to be hiding at that time.

The creation of the additional opinion stemmed from a mishap inside the Justice Department: Kennedy's first opinion was accidentally cleared for public release before government agencies had blacked out all the classified information it cited.

While the government privately took responsibility for the error, it initially refused to correct it. Two people familiar with the discussions said prosecutors in the Justice Department's Civil Division gave Kennedy a choice: his entire decision would remain classified or he could write a new version that did not reference classified evidence.

Justice Department sources offered a different account. They said the department later relented and gave Kennedy a properly redacted version of the opinion, in which classified material had been blacked out. The sources said this opinion was meant to be published. But for reasons that remain unclear, the edited opinion became the starting point for the creation of an entirely new version.

Matthew Miller, a spokesman with the Justice Department, said "the department's practice in all of these cases is to propose release of a properly redacted opinion."

The second opinion, drafted after a contentious exchange between Kennedy and the prosecutors, did not refer to the earlier version and gave no indication material had been removed.

Legal scholars and classification experts said the drafting of a second opinion was a deception. All previous opinions in Guantánamo habeas cases have noted when material has been blacked out or removed to protect security.

Stephen Gillers, who teaches legal ethics at New York University School of Law, said Kennedy may well have had a legitimate concern about "national security issues."

"But that concern then inspired him to participate in the creation of a parallel universe that fools everyone except a small circle of judges. We don't allow the justice system to create false impressions," Gillers said.

ProPublica obtained the original version of Kennedy's opinion when it appeared briefly in the court record and conducted a line-by-line comparison with what was published five weeks later. That comparison, highlighting information that was removed, can be found here.

Reporting for this story was complicated by the fact that much of the evidence is classified, and judges, lawyers and prosecutors are barred from discussing most aspects of the litigation. But an examination of the opinions and additional documents, as well as interviews with government and intelligence officials, former military prosecutors and key players in the habeas cases, makes it possible for the first time to publicly examine the evidence against a detainee designated for indefinite detention.

To justify Uthman's incarceration, the government relied on statements from five current or former detainees who were previously discredited by judges in other cases, questioned by internal Obama administration assessments or found unreliable by military psychiatrists because they were mendacious, mentally ill or subjected to torture.

Kennedy's first opinion reveals that some of the government's evidence came from a detainee who committed suicide at Guantánamo three years ago after months of hunger strikes. In the second opinion, the detainee's name is concealed, making it impossible for the public to know he is dead.

DOJ's Miller said witness testimony is thoroughly reviewed before it is presented. "In every habeas case where we ask the court to rely upon detainee statements, we do so because we believe courts can and should consider their accounts based on the totality of the evidence," Miller said.

The Justice Department has appealed Kennedy's ruling and officials there declined to say what they might do if the government does not prevail.

Uthman, according to senior government officials, is on the secret list of 48 Guantánamo detainees who the Obama administration designated for indefinite detention and, officials said, he is the first of those men to win his habeas petition.

Further complicating matters, Uthman hails from Yemen -- a country the White House has deemed too unstable to handle such a transfer. Should he send Uthman home, President Obama risks a fierce political backlash from Republican lawmakers eager to portray the president as weak on terrorism.

Disclosure of the Uthman case comes at a pivotal moment in the government's complicated efforts to prosecute detainees and close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. On Oct. 6, a federal judge in New York barred the government from using its main witness against a terrorism defendant because the information that led investigators to the witness was obtained through torture.

Botched Classification

When Kennedy, who serves on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, ruled in February that Uthman was being improperly detained, his 27-page opinion was turned over to a court security officer for classification review.

The judges themselves have very little insight into the process and no sway over what is redacted. Government security officials review filings in the habeas litigation and other cases involving classified evidence and remove sensitive information.

In the Uthman case, that clearance process took three weeks. Kennedy's decision was stamped "Redacted," by the court's security officer and returned to his chambers on March 16. The deletions were minimal. For the first 16 pages, the only word blacked out was "secret," stamped at the top and bottom of each page.

Kennedy's clerk added the document to the electronic court file late in the day. Twenty-five hours later, the security office sent out urgent notices to attorneys and the judge that the opinion had not been ready for release and needed additional deletions. The decision was promptly removed from the public docket.

In a closed hearing in his courtroom four days later, Kennedy lashed out at the government for releasing classified information. He and Justice Department attorneys then argued over what to do, according to three sources familiar with the discussion.

Kennedy insisted that the reasoning behind his first habeas ruling be made public. But the Justice Department resisted releasing it in redacted form, arguing that blacked out portions would call attention to the exact material the government wanted to conceal.

With Uthman slated for indefinite detention, the stakes were high.

During the next month, government lawyers scoured the Internet for the original decision; the legal database Westlaw was asked to remove it from archives; defense attorneys were instructed to destroy their electronic copies.

Even the court docket was altered. When the opinion was originally posted on March 16, the docket noted Kennedy's grant of the writ of habeas corpus to the petitioner. Today, the entry for March 16 simply reads: "Document Entered In Error Erroneously."

Kennedy ordered the Justice Department to explain how the information was released and to suggest solutions. In the written response, according to three people who saw it, the department took responsibility for the error. Kennedy rejected the government's initial attempt to keep the opinion classified, insisting on other options, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

One Justice Department source said the department relented, gave Kennedy a properly redacted copy of his opinion, and expected him to publish it. But two others said no such intention was conveyed to Kennedy.

Classification experts could not recall another case in which a second decision was secretly created.

"Reconstituting and replacing a judicial opinion without public notice is active deception," said Steven Aftergood, a classification expert with the Federation of American Scientists in Washington. "There is a role for classification and there are things that need to be redacted, but there is never a justification for deception in the judicial process and that's what this is," Aftergood said, after reviewing both versions of Kennedy's ruling in the Uthman case.

Two senior officials in the Obama administration and two others with direct involvement in habeas cases were surprised to learn that Kennedy's final opinion was a different version than the original.

Changing the Record

Uthman was 21 years old and traveling with about 30 other men when he was taken into custody by Pakistani police in the town of Parachinar, near the Afghan border. It was Dec. 15, 2001, and U.S. troops were in the middle of a five-day battle against an al-Qaida stronghold known as Tora Bora, where bin Laden was believed to have taken shelter. Parachinar and Tora Bora are 12 miles apart but separated by a treacherous mountain range that takes two to three days to traverse.

The government maintains that Uthman was in Afghanistan to fight for bin Laden; Uthman has claimed he went there to teach the Quran to children. Some facts of his story are not in dispute, some critical ones are. They look different depending on which of Kennedy's two opinions you read.

Kennedy's original opinion noted that Uthman was seized in Parachinar; that he reached the town after an eight-day trek from the Afghan town of Khost, nowhere near Tora Bora; and that his journey to Pakistan began around Dec. 8, 2001. Those facts make it difficult to portray Uthman as a fighter in a battle that took place between Dec. 12 and Dec. 17 at Tora Bora. Two footnotes in the original opinion note that the government does not contest that Uthman was taken into custody in Parachinar.

Both were removed in the second opinion and Kennedy substituted wording to write instead that Uthman admitted he was seized "in late 2001 in the general vicinity of Tora Bora, Afghanistan."

The intent of this editing may have been to conceal the role of the Pakistanis in capturing al-Qaida fighters although those details were long ago declassified. But the effect was to link Uthman more closely to the retreat of bin Laden and his inner circle through Tora Bora.

It is unclear precisely what restrictions or classification requests guided Kennedy's alterations. Neither the judge nor the Justice Department would say.

Gillers said such editing has an effect on public opinion, even when it doesn't change the outcome of the case.

"The ability to influence Kennedy's opinion gives the government a public relations advantage," Gillers said. "These battles are fought outside the court system as well as within it."

Another advantage has been the government's ability to largely conceal the identities of its witnesses.

In ordinary federal proceedings, from mob cases to white-collar crime, prosecutors would be loath to attempt such strategies because repeated use of a discredited witness would provide a significant opening to defense attorneys. In the habeas cases, it is difficult for defense lawyers and judges to learn of the roles played by flawed witnesses in previous cases.

The issue arose in a separate habeas case in May 2009, when Judge Gladys Kessler of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia noted that a government witness had been diagnosed by Guantánamo medical staff as suffering from "psychosis." In a footnote, she said she was troubled that the diagnosis had come to her attention "through the diligent work" of the defense attorney "and not as a result of the government's obligation to provide" it.

Attorneys with security clearances can access classified information the government plans to raise in court at a secure facility near the Pentagon. But the material is not easy to use.

The facility is staffed by court security officers and Justice Department officials who determine what information the lawyers can remove from the facility, including, in some cases, their own notes. No classified information can be shared over the telephone or Internet, a significant burden for lawyers who reside outside the Washington area.

"It's monumentally difficult to fight these battles when the government holds all the cards," said David Remes, one of the attorneys representing Uthman. Neither Remes nor Uthman's other Washington attorneys, including William Livingston at Covington & Burling, would discuss the details of the Uthman case.

Near Total Secrecy

Although President Obama inherited many aspects of U.S. detention policy from his predecessor, Guantánamo detainees have been fighting their detentions in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia almost entirely on his watch.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June 2008, as Obama was campaigning for president, that detainees could challenge their detentions in federal court under the constitutional doctrine of habeas corpus, which protects individuals from unlawful imprisonment by the government.

Obama, still a senator then, issued a statement calling the ruling "an important step toward re-establishing our credibility as a nation committed to the rule of law, and rejecting a false choice between fighting terrorism and respecting habeas corpus. Our courts have employed habeas corpus with rigor and fairness for more than two centuries, and we must continue to do so as we defend the freedom that violent extremists seek to destroy." The first challenges were decided on Nov. 20, just three weeks after Obama's election.

Lawyers from the Justice Department's Civil Division handle the Guantánamo litigation in coordination with intelligence agencies and the Department of Defense, which acts as warden of Guantánamo. The litigation process was built around the government's assertion that the bulk of the evidence is classified, a claim that has enabled the government to operate under a cloak of near total secrecy, with judges and defense attorneys barred from publicly discussing most aspects of the litigation. Court filings that reveal details about the cases undergo classification review before they are made public.

Intelligence and military officials take the lead in determining what can be released. As this story was going to publication, the Justice Department released an unclassified version of its appeal brief in the Uthman case. A number of details that were excised from Kennedy's final opinion appear in the appeals brief.

Justice Department spokesman Miller said, "as a general matter, Justice Department litigators are not responsible for classification or declassification decisions in habeas cases."

Officials at other agencies said they had a fairly free hand in removing information supplied for the government's case. "Whenever a court security officer identifies a document slated for posting on the court's public docket as potentially containing classified information, the officer refers that document to appropriate agencies for classification review," Maj. Tanya Bradsher, a spokeswoman for the Pentagon, said.

One government official who spoke on the condition of anonymity acknowledged that the classification process has been plagued with inconsistencies and that no one is coordinating the effort. In most declassified habeas filings, the names of all detainee-witnesses are removed; in others, a name or two slips past the redaction process.

Some government-ordered deletions clearly appear designed to conceal names of confidential informants, associations with foreign intelligence services and the identities of certain federal agents. But the Uthman case shows that many of the deletions go further.

"This censorship has nothing to do with protecting 'national security' and everything to do with covering up government mistakes and malfeasance," said Jonathan Hafetz, a professor at Seton Hall University School of Law who has represented a number of detainees in habeas litigation. The practice, he said, allows the government to "mislead the American public on issues of profound importance to the country by skewing the perception of who really is at Guantánamo."

There have been some attempts, but with limited results, to make more of the habeas proceedings public. Nearly two years ago, as the litigation was getting under way, three media organizations -- The Associated Press, The New York Times and USA Today -- sought access to the court filings in which the government argued for holding the detainees.

The government fought the request but Judge Thomas Hogan, then the chief judge of the U.S. district court in Washington, ordered the government to release redacted, unclassified versions of its filings within 14 days.

David Schulz, a First Amendment attorney who is representing the media group, said the government is flouting Hogan's order.

"The frustrating thing about this litigation is that the judge in no uncertain terms upheld the public's constitutional right to inspect the records of the habeas proceeding and yet, nearly two years after the documents were supposed to be filed and publicly available, we are still waiting to get properly redacted filings," Schulz said.

The government is now seeking to amend Hogan's order to include six new broad categories of information that it can restrict without review by a judge unless the detainee objects. Schulz has opposed this idea. Both sides are waiting to hear from Hogan.

When the media group first fought for access, just weeks after the 2008 presidential election, the Bush administration was still in office. But Schulz said the election has had no impact on the department's position in this area.

Said Schulz: "The Obama Justice Department has fought as hard and resisted as strongly the right that the public has to see these court records."

Follow on Twitter: @dafnalinzer




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Public Opinion Snapshot: Public Is Strongly Against Cutting Medicare

This article was published by the Center for American Progress.

By Ruy Teixeira

The conservative assault on government marches on. Their latest trick is passage of the House Republican budget bill. This bill takes direct aim at Medicare by proposing to cut funding for the program and turn it into a fixed amount voucher that seniors would have to use to purchase private health insurance. To say this approach is unpopular is to considerably understate the case.

First, take cutting Medicare. In a just-released Washington Post/ABC poll 78 percent opposed cutting spending on Medicare "to reduce the national deb," including 65 percent who were strongly opposed. This compares to just 21 percent who favored cutting the program.

As for turning Medicare into a fixed amount voucher to be used to purchase private health insurance, 65 percent in the same poll prefer that the system remain the way it is. And that number rises to 84 percent when a follow-up query is posed stipulating that the value of the voucher would rise more slowly than the price of private health insurance (as the Congressional Budget Office projects will be the case).

This can fairly be characterized as massive opposition. Conservatives, who appear to lack any policy common sense, might want to exert some political common sense and retreat from their assault on Medicare.

Ruy Teixeira is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress. To learn more about his public opinion analysis, go to the Media and Progressive Values page and the Progressive Studies program page of our website.



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Monday, April 25, 2011

House GOP’s Dirty Little Secret Revealed: Ryan’s Budget Would Hike Debt Ceiling

Even as congressional Republicans ramp up their rhetoric in opposition to raising the federal debt ceiling, the deeply conservative budget House Republicans approved earlier this month also would allow the government to grow its debt, Senate Democrats charge.

Congress must approve an increase in the amount the government is allowed to borrow, or the federal government would slip into default for the first time. Such an action could spark a serious financial crisis.

A number of conservatives have indicated an unwillingness to increase the debt ceiling, but the controversial budget authored by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and approved by House Republicans would raise the government's debt limit by $2 trillion immediately, and by $9 trillion over the next decade, according to the analysis released by Senate Democrats.

The Ryan proposal, which would constitute a federal budget for the 2012 federal fiscal year, would cut deeply into a variety of key federal programs, and would essentially privatize the Medicare program. It also would allow for deeper tax cuts for the richest Americans.

But, say Democrats, had Republicans not changed House rules, their vote for the Ryan budget would have been a vote to raise the debt ceiling.

A Los Angeles Times writer first called attention to the debt-ceiling implications of the Ryan budget earlier this month.

“As far as I could tell, no amendments were offered to reduce the levels of spending outlined in the budget to hold that level of debt at or below [the current level of] $14.3 trillion. So, I guess that means Republicans won't object to raising the current debt ceiling within the next few weeks so that the federal government can honor the commitments it has already made?” the Times post says.

The previous House rule, known as the Gephardt rule -- named for former House Democratic Leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri -- ordered that a "resolution specifying the amount of the debt limit contained in the budget resolution automatically is engrossed and deemed to have passed the House by the same vote as the conference report on the budget resolution, thereby avoiding a separate vote on the debt-limit legislation," Democrats say.

Republicans eliminated the Gephardt rule when they took control of Congress in January.



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Gulf Renewal Project Launches Conservative Radio Ad Campaign

A new radio ad campaign this week on conservative news/talk radio stations in the Gulf states will educate residents to make them aware that under current law, BP fines for the oil spill will go to the federal treasury, unless Congress takes action to dedicate the money to restoration in the Gulf.

The campaign is sponsored by the Gulf Renewal Project and follows its release of new polling last week showing that 83 percent of voters nationwide support—and 69 percent strongly support—dedicating the BP oil spill penalties to restoring the Mississippi River Delta and Gulf Coast. The poll showed that an overwhelming majority of conservative voters favor this proposal, including 76 percent (60 percent strongly) of Republicans, and 78 percent (62 percent strongly) of voters who agree with the Tea Party movement.

The ads started airing Monday through Friday during morning and afternoon drive time on 22 conservative news/talk radio stations in 18 markets in the five Gulf states, according to the coalition of environmental groups sponsoring the media buy. Those groups include the Environmental Defense Fund, National Audubon Society, and Oxfam America.

Several Democratic and Republican members of Congress from the Gulf region have introduced legislation to dedicate these penalties to Gulf restoration. Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) recently published an op-ed article in Politico advocating for approval of the RESTORE The Gulf Coast Act that she and Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) introduced. The bill calls for dedicating at least 80 percent of BP penalties paid under the Clean Water Act to Gulf states.

"Voters across all party lines all over the nation agree that BP's fines for the oil spill belong in the Gulf. We need Gulf leaders to get together and get restoration done for the region's environment and economy this spring," says a statement from the Gulf Renewal Project.

The radio ad recording is here.

April 20 marked the one-year anniversary of the explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon offshore oil rig, which touched off a flow of crude oil into the waters of the Gulf of Mexico that lasted 87 days. The Deepwater Horizon incident became the worst environmental disaster of its kind in U.S. history.



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First Months of 2011 Yield a Lobbying Slump? Not Necessarily

by Marian Wang, ProPublica

Lobbying disclosures last week have spurred a flurry of stories about how the pace of lobbying has slowed in the first few months of 2011.

The reports note that spending by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which typically tops the list for lobbying expenditures, dropped to $10.9 million in the first quarter of the year, down from the $25.1 million it spent in the same quarter last year. This supposed ‘slump,’ however, may be due more to the fact that last year was both an election year and a year of record spending—particularly on the health care law, which the Chamber fiercely opposed. (Spending on health care lobbying has slowed overall since Congress passed the health care law last year, The Hill notes.) The group spent about as much—in the neighborhood of $10 million—in the first quarters of 2008 and 2009.

Meanwhile, a slew of other businesses have redoubled their lobbying efforts.

Communications giants AT&T and Comcast increased their activity, OpenSecrets reported, as did tech companies Google and Facebook. Facebook more than quadrupled its first quarter spending this year in what appears to be part of a broad push to make political inroads. According to its disclosures, privacy issues, net neutrality, patent reform were areas of interest. Google also lobbied on the issues of privacy, international tax reform and antitrust, among other issues.

BP and its contractor Transocean also spent more on lobbying as they neared the first anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon disaster. The former increased its first quarter spending by 25 percent over the same period last year. (It’s also recently resumed giving political donations, most of which have gone to Republicans.)

During this time, top spenders in the financial industry also upped their lobbying expenditures by about 3 percent from the same period last year, according to the Wall Street Journal. Those efforts largely focused on regulations mandated by the financial reform bill that the firms hope to amend, delay, or kill. Here’s the Journal:


Wells Fargo & Co. shelled out more on lobbying than any other financial firm, surpassing J.P. Morgan Chase, which had the top spot in 2010. Wells Fargo's lobbying expenditures nearly doubled to $1.9 million during the first quarter from $1 million in the same period a year ago. A Wells Fargo spokeswoman declined to comment.


Disclosure documents show the financial industry turned its attention to regulators and executive-branch agencies in charge of implementing Dodd-Frank, and reflect the dozens of meetings the industry has held with officials at the Federal Reserve, the Treasury Department, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and others.

Finally, it’s worth noting that lobbying disclosures don’t give the full picture. For instance, not all the work that K Street firms do for their clients on regulatory matters has to be reported as lobbying. The Hill notes that much of it involves legal work that is exempt from disclosure.

Follow on Twitter: @mariancw


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Saturday, April 23, 2011

CEOs Collect Raises, Workers Collect Pink Slips, Union PayWatch Finds

While millions of Americans struggled to get back on their feet after the worst economic downturn in decades, chief executive officers of the nation's largest companies got average pay of $11.4 million in 2010–a 23 percent increase in one year, according to Executive PayWatch, released this week by the AFL-CIO labor organization.

AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says that the release of the searchable online database is part of a broad campaign to strengthen Wall Street reform, close corporate tax loopholes and "ensure that poor and middle class Americans are no longer required to pay for the greed of corporate CEOs."

Corporate executive compensation has been a simmering issue nationally in recent years, prompting national outrage in 2009 when big Wall Street firms like American Internatinal Group paid eye-popping bonuses after being rescued by taxpayer-funded bailouts. The nation's unemployment rate soared to nearly double digits while these bonuses were being paid. Meanwhile, many who are employed find wages stagnating.

"Despite the collapse of the financial market at the hands of executives less than three years ago, the disparity between CEO and workers' pay has continued to grow to levels that are simply stunning," says Trumka.

The AFL-CIO campaign, he adds, is making hard information widely available and encourages people to contact lawmakers to defend and strengthen Wall Street reform.

Executive PayWatch's searchable data bank enables users to get information by state, industry and top-paid CEOs and compare the pay of top CEOs with the median pay of nurses, teachers, firefighters and other workers. For the first time, Facebook users will also have access to the information and to participate in the campaign.

The AFL-CIO's CEO pay estimate is based on 299 companies in the S&P 500 Index whose executive compensation data is available for 2010, the union says. The 299 CEOs received a combined total of $3.4 billion in 2010, enough compensation to support 102,325 jobs paying median wages. The median wage for all occupations was $33,190 in 2009, according to the latest available data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

"For the first time, we have hope that things can change," Trumka says, noting that the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act passed last year gives shareholders tools to help rein in CEO pay.

The new law requires public companies to begin disclosing the ratio of CEO pay to median worker pay.

"The law," he says, "will help investors and the public learn which companies provide fair wages and good jobs to their employees, compared with those that have outrageous CEO-to-worker pay disparities."

Pointing to attacks by some large banks and Wall Street lobbyists on the Dodd-Frank act, Trumka says the AFL-CIO campaign will work hard to defend historic reform. Republicans on Capitol Hill have been hoping to kill funding that would be used to enforce provisions of the financial reform law.

"Their brazen attempts to undermine reform surprise and offend me, and I think they will surprise and offend most Americans. Apparently Wall Street doesn't want people to know that while working Americans paid for the economic crisis with their jobs, their homes and their retirement savings, these Teflon CEOs escaped unscathed," Trumka says.

The Dodd-Frank Act also provides shareholders with "say-on-pay" advisory votes on executive compensation. This year, Executive PayWatch highlights case studies at Occidental Petroleum, Reynolds American, Hewlett-Packard, PulteGroup, Rite Aid, and Abercrombie & Fitch where there are red flags for investors to watch for when voting on these companies' executive pay practices, the AFL-CIO says.


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Natural Gas Drilling Is at a Crucial Turning Point

by Abrahm Lustgarten, ProPublica


ProPublica has been covering gas drilling since 2008. When The Guardian asked us to participate in a series it is running about hydraulic fracturing and natural gas, we wrote this analysis of how Europe might learn from the problems we’ve uncovered in the United States.


First, a wave of new natural gas drilling swept across the United States. Mountain and pastoral landscapes were transformed into landscape-scale factories that optimistically promised a century's worth of clean-burning fuel and a risk-free solution to dependence on imported oil. In 2008, it seemed the ultimate win-win in an era of hard choices.


Later, more sobering facts began to complicate things. The drilling relies on an invasive process called hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," that uses brute force and dangerous chemicals to crack open the Earth and extract the gas from previously unreachable deep deposits.


Where the drilling and fracturing happened, water wells sometimes became contaminated. Waste pits leaked into aquifers. Large quantities of fresh water were used. Mountain glaciers and Wyoming valleys became shrouded in smog. Reports began to emerge that natural gas might cause almost as much greenhouse gas pollution as coal.


Now the industry is at a crucial point. Even as the hard lessons have come into focus, the myriad opportunities presented by this vast fuel source have made its development inevitable.


In the United States, President Barack Obama stands firmly behind expanded natural gas use and the local economic development it brings. In the next 10 years, the United States will use the fracturing technology to drill hundreds of thousands of wells in cities, rivers and watersheds. Drilling – along with fracking – is fast expanding across Europe, South Africa and Russia. And it will not stop while oil prices are at record highs, the Middle East is in turmoil and nuclear energy is bogged down by global distrust after the Fukushima crisis.


The industry and governments need to figure out how to scale up gas drilling safely and how to learn from the mistakes in the United States where the fracturing technology was first put to commercial use. The problem is that despite their head start, U.S. scientists and regulators have not answered crucial questions about the risks.


Where will the vast amounts of water for fracturing come from, and how will the waste water be safely disposed of?



Are regulations in place to make sure the industry extracts the gas as safely as possible and that underground sources of drinking water are protected?



And what, exactly, happens when bedrock is shattered and filled with chemicals deep underground?



It remains unclear, for example, how far the tiny fissures that radiate through the bedrock from hydraulic fracturing might reach.


Or whether they can connect underground passageways or open cracks into groundwater aquifers that could allow the chemical solution to escape into drinking water, as methane from these wells has been proven to have done.


And it is not certain that the chemicals – some, such as benzene, are known to cause cancer – are adequately contained by either the well structure beneath the Earth or by the people, pipelines and trucks that handle it on the surface. Almost no research exists into these issues.



Rather than learning from the environmental problems, the drilling industry has insisted they are not its fault. It maintains the fracturing happens thousands of feet from water supplies and below layers of impenetrable rock that seal the world above from what happens down below. There is no reason for concern, they say.


Yet there is. And the frequent cases of contamination and well control problems across the United States that have come to light through several ProPublica investigations prove it. Even if layers of rock can seal water supplies from the layer where fluid is injected, the gas well itself creates an opening in that layer.


The well bore is supposed to be surrounded by cement, but often there are large empty pockets or the cement cracks under pressure. In many instances, the high pressure of the fluids being injected into the ground has created leaks of gas – and sometimes fluids – into surrounding water supplies..


This is partly why the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has undertaken a nationwide study into the lifecycle impacts of fracking, for the first time. The next step will be to use the findings to inform a rigorous system of oversight so drilling happens in the best, most technologically advanced and safest way possible.


In the United States that is going to be tough, because the federal government does not regulate hydraulic fracturing. Oversight is left to states where regulations vary widely. Europe, where disparate governments oversee a shared continuous natural landscape, may face similar challenges.The energy industry already knows how to prevent water pollution and how to sharply reduce toxic air emissions, for example. Drilling companies have figured out how to drill wells with fewer toxic chemicals, so it can enclose wastewater. In the US, legislators are considering a baseline set of rules with higher standards which would make fracturing slightly more expensive than the industry has wanted, but also offer an opportunity for consistency, predictability and the streamlining of operations.


For places already coping with the environmental consequences of drilling, that will boost confidence that natural gas can be harvested safely. It will also lead to political and regulatory stability that will end up saving the industry money. And only then can drilling for gas be the win-win it was promised to be.

Follow on Twitter: @AbrahmL




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Job Killers: Is It Kentucky Democrats, Or Mountaintop Removal Itself?

A pair of Democratic congressmen from Kentucky are finding themselves under fire from a coal-industry advocacy group for supporting legislation that would mandate cleaner water standards in coal mining.

The group Federation for American Coal, Energy and Security (FACES of Coal) is criticizing Reps. Ben Chandler and John Yarmuth for signing onto the Clean Water Protection Act. Although FACES of Coal slams the Democrats for killing jobs, the mining practice the group is defending actually arguably is meant to eliminate the need for miners in the process.

The bipartisan legislation, authored by Reps. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) and Dave Reichert (R-Wash.), would prevent industrial mining waste from entering the water supply and harming human and environmental health.

FACES of Coal fired off a press release that claims that the Clean Water Protection Act would "destroy Kentucky coal jobs and bring to an end surface mining operations throughout Eastern and Western Kentucky."

The bill is actually another try at legislation attempted in the previous Congress, and would redefine "fill material" to exclude mining waste materials and will clarify environmental law to restore and maintain the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the nation's waters, according to a statement from Pallone's office.

"I remain committed to passing this legislation which will alleviate the wide array of human health issues directly correlated with mountaintop removal coal mining,” says Pallone. “By restoring the Clean Water Act to its original intent and redefining fill material, we’ll be able to keep toxic mining waste out of our nation's streams.”

Mountaintop removal is a mining method where the top of a mountain is blown off to extract thin seams of coal. It permanently destroys streams, forests and mountains, the statement from Pallone's office notes. The broken rock, or "excess spoil" from this process is usually dumped into nearby valleys, creating "valley fills" that cover thousands of acres of land and bury thousands of miles of streams, it adds.

Numerous health problems associated with exposure to these chemicals and heavy metals in fill material include cancer, organ failure and learning disabilities, the Pallone statement says.

The FACES of Coal statement against Chandler and Yarmuth doesn't mention mountaintop removal. Rather, it refers more benignly to "terrain adjustment industries."

"The sweeping effects proposed in Pallone's Bill would seriously damage Kentucky coal jobs and Kentucky's economy. It would also harm almost every construction, production and land development operation in our state and elsewhere. It's absurd for anyone to support it," contends Phil Osborne, executive director of Kentucky FACES of Coal. "Kentucky needs jobs; we don't need our congressman supporting legislation that destroys jobs."

Despite that argument, however, mountaintop removal is much less expensive for coal producers than is traditional underground mining, and requires significantly fewer workers. The process, in fact, is designed almost designed entirely to "take the labor force out of the mining operation," according to a group opposed to the practice. Coal produced through mountaintop removal constituted just 5 percent of the coal production as recently as 2001, according to one estimate.

Chandler was first elected to Congress in 2004, Yarmuth, two years later.

Neither Chandler nor Yarmuth has taken major amounts of campaign funds from the coal industry, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics, an organization that tracks the influence of money in politics.


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Friday, April 22, 2011

Justice Dept. To Probe High Gas Prices

The Justice Department will lead a broad-based task force designed to ferret out fraud in the energy markets which may be causing the high prices consumers are paying at the gas pump.

Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday announced the formation of an Oil and Gas Price Fraud Working Group to monitor oil and gas markets for potential violations of criminal or civil laws to safeguard against unlawful consumer harm.

Fuel prices have risen sharply nationwide in recent weeks, approaching or exceeding the $4-per-gallon level. More than 70 percent of Americans say the increase is causing financial hardships for them, according to a recent poll.

“Rapidly rising gasoline prices are pinching the pockets of consumers across the country,” says Holder. “We will be vigilant in monitoring the oil and gas markets for any wrongdoing so that consumers can be confident they are not paying higher prices as a result of illegal activity. If illegal conduct is responsible for increasing gas prices, state and federal authorities should take swift action.”

The working group Holder announced will include representatives from Justice, the National Association of Attorneys General, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Federal Trade Commission, the Department of the Treasury, the Federal Reserve Board, the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as the departments of Agriculture and Energy, according to a statement from the Justice Department.

The Oil and Gas Price Fraud Working Group will explore whether there is any evidence of manipulation of oil and gas prices, collusion, fraud, or misrepresentations at the retail or wholesale levels that violates state or federal laws and harms consumers or the federal government as a purchaser of oil and gas. The working group will also evaluate developments in commodities markets and examine investor practices, supply and demand factors and the role of speculators and index traders in oil futures markets, the statement says.

Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) recently called for such an investigation, saying that a “speculative premium” costs drivers up to 64 cents per gallon.

Several other Democrats have been pushing President Obama to take even more direct action, by authorizing a release of oil from the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve in order to increase supply and bring down prices. So far, Obama has resisted taking such action.

Meanwhile, congressional Republicans have been hammering the president, asserting that his administration has been restricting domestic production -- an argument that Obama and other Democrats call false.



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Capitol Idea: The Better Path to Prosperity

By Scott Nance

Republican Rep. Paul Ryan calls his budget plan "A Path To Prosperity." Ryan's proposal calls for big cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and other key federal programs, all while carving out more room for even deeper tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.

Last week, as House Republicans were gearing up to approve taking the nation down this "Path To Prosperity," a top official elsewhere in Washington was busy mapping out his own path. He says that on this alternate path, "decent unemployment benefits are foundational." He also calls for "strong social safety nets" and progressive taxation. Moreover, "collective bargaining ... is very important, especially in an environment of stagnation of real wages." You can see that on this road we're going in an entirely opposite direction than the one the Washington GOP would have us travel.

Just who is proposing this other path? Is it Nancy Pelosi? Harry Reid? Dennis Kucinich? Some other "socialist" Democrat?

None of the above. The proponent of this other plan isn't even an American. He is Dominique Strauss-Kahn, and as the executive director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), he's not exactly your typical liberal. As the head of the IMF, Strauss-Kahn is the world's banker-in-chief. He spoke recently at a session on the global unemployment crisis at the Brookings Institution in Washington.

"Just as we managed to tame inflation in the '80s, this decade should be the decade of employment," Strauss-Kahn says. "What must be done for this? We all know what has to be done. It's politically difficult, it's costly, but we know what's on the agenda."

Nowhere on that agenda are tax cuts, especially for the wealthiest taxpayers, privatization of basic programs like Medicare or Social Security, or any of the economic prescriptions favored by Republicans in Washington.

Indeed, one of the biggest problems that Strauss-Kahn sees is that of income inequality. "So, there is no ambiguity. We need policy to reduce inequality, and to ensure a fairer distribution of opportunity and resources," he says. Economic growth, so hallowed by American conservatives, "alone is not enough," Strauss-Kahn declares.

So why would Strauss-Kahn, whose job it is to look out for the world's biggest financial and banking interests, say such a thing? When it comes to this, he is no bleeding heart. It's all in self-interest, and he admits it. "IMF research suggests that inequality can make countries more prone to financial crisis," he says. "We have some very interesting results on this. At the same time, some other IMF research shows that sustainable growth, over time, is associated with more equal income distribution."

Nations should establish policies, Strauss-Kahn says, that "allows fair sharing of both the gains and the pains." A government could establish these policies out of a sense of fair play, or compassion, what Strauss-Kahn calls the "philosophical question," but from "the IMF's point of view, that's not the point," he says. "We need it because it's conditioned to the sustainability of growth."

At its core, the Strauss-Kahn/IMF plan isn't based on some technical theory, or macroeconomic strategy. "A few thousand years ago, Aristotle wrote that the best partnership in the state is the one which operates through the middle people," Strauss-Kahn says. "Those states where the middle element is large have every chance of having a well-run constitution, he said. That was true at the time of Aristotle, it was true at the time of Keynes, it's true today. Stability depends a lot on a strong middle class that can propel demand."

Unlike the American GOP, Strauss-Kahn hasn't forgotten that over the long haul, the economy needs a strong middle class to continue to grow. If given a choice, I'll follow the Strauss-Kahn path to prosperity, thank you very much.

Scott Nance has covered Congress and the federal government for more than a decade. Capitol Idea is his regular column from Washington. This article was first published as The Better Path to Prosperity on Blogcritics.



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Two Views of Samantha Power: A Case Study in Conservative Journalism

This article was published by the Center for American Progress.

By Eric Alterman

Samantha Power, Wikipedia tells me, is special assistant to President Barack Obama and runs the Office of Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights as senior director of multilateral affairs on the staff of the National Security Council. She is, I can tell you, a remarkable woman by any imaginable definition in too many ways to elaborate here (though Wikipedia’s entry will give you at least an idea of what I mean and this New York Times article will give you an idea of why the role she may or may not have played in convincing the president to intervene in Libya has made her front-page news again).

Personally, I am divided about the decision to intervene in Libya. Even if it turns out swimmingly—which military interventions never, ever do—I think Obama made a grievous mistake in failing to go to Congress to get the requisite constitutional authority to put U.S. soldiers in harm’s way for an extended period. But my point today has little to do with the ultimate wisdom (or lack thereof) of Obama’s decision or even with the degree and quality of Ms. Power’s influence. Rather it’s about the nature of conservative journalism.

Inspired by her role in the Libya decision—whatever it may have been—two conservative journals of opinion have offered up new profiles of Power tied to the question of her influence over the president. The first, by longtime neoconservative Jacob Heilbrunn, is titled “Samantha and Her Subjects,” and appears in the new issue of The National Interest. The second one, by conservative author Stanley Kurtz, appeared in a recent edition of National Review.

In the former, Heilbrunn takes Power’s ideas seriously as he simultaneously takes serious issue with them. He describes her thusly (and to my mind accurately):

Power is not just an advocate for human rights. She is an outspoken crusader against genocide. … she has made it her life’s mission to shame American statesmen into action and to transform U.S. foreign policy. And as she seeks to create a new paradigm, she is becoming a paradigmatic figure. She is a testament to the collapse of the old foreign-policy establishment and the rise of a fresh elite. This elite is united by a shared belief that American foreign policy must be fundamentally transformed from an obsession with national interests into a broader agenda that seeks justice for women and minorities, and promotes democracy whenever and wherever it can—at the point of a cruise missile if necessary. The same century-long progressive expansion of the democratic franchise that has taken place at home is also supposed to occur abroad. She is, you could say, the prophet armed.

Heilbrunn does not like much of what he sees in Power’s thinking. Oddly, and somewhat bravely, he takes issue with her refusal to sign up for George W. Bush’s Iraqi misadventure. On a 2004 panel, she told him that “The Bush administration was not acting multilaterally and Saddam’s actions, at that point, didn’t meet the definition of genocide even if they had in the past.” Heilbrunn recalls that he “never found [the answer] fully satisfactory, at least for someone who was otherwise championing the cause of stopping mad and bad dictators around the world.”

If so, perhaps he should have consulted the speech of a certain young Illinois state senator who exclaimed at an antiwar rally at the time:

I don't oppose all wars. What I am opposed to is a dumb war. What I am opposed to is a rash war. What I am opposed to is the cynical attempt by Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz and other armchair, weekend warriors in this administration to shove their own ideological agendas down our throats, irrespective of the costs in lives lost and in hardships borne. What I am opposed to is the attempt by political hacks like Karl Rove to distract us from a rise in the uninsured, a rise in the poverty rate, a drop in the median income, to distract us from corporate scandals and a stock market that has just gone through the worst month since the Great Depression. That's what I'm opposed to. A dumb war. A rash war. A war based not on reason but on passion, not on principle but on politics.

But not all of Heilbrunn’s criticisms are as easy to puncture. He writes, “What is missing from Power’s work, however, is a political context. There seems to be the assumption that Washington can always be on the right side of history—that American presidents can ignore domestic and international considerations simply to plunge into conflicts on the side of the beleaguered whenever they feel like it.” This strikes me as fair. Genocide in far-off lands is not a factor in the voting patterns of any powerful American interest group or voting bloc, unfortunately. But losing soldiers in foreign wars in which the United States enjoys no clearly defined national interest surely is.

Heilbrunn is also sensibly suspect of the heroic book-length portrait Power painted of the late U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, Sergio Vieira de Mello, who was killed along with 20 other members of his staff in August 2003 when he was the secretary-general’s special representative in Iraq, relying in part on the tough-minded critique by The Nation’s Michael Massing. Having offered up a fair assessment of Power’s philosophy and mused cautiously about the degree of influence she exercised over the president, finding fault with her “solution to the conundrum that has bedeviled the Democratic Party since Vietnam—when to sanction the use of force abroad—is to support wars of national liberation. This is likely not a solution at all.”

Fair enough. One needn’t agree with Heilbrunn’s conservative critique to recognize that he has dealt with his subject fairly. In fact, one can read the critique and come to an entirely different set of conclusions, which, to my mind, is the mark of any intellectually honest assessment.

Now turn to the work of National Review’s Mr. Stanley Kurtz, who has set himself the same task as Mr. Heilbrunn. In a teasing post on “The Corner,” he promises readers, “Want to know what our Libya intervention is really all about? Want to know what Barack Obama is really all about? Then you just might want to know what Samantha Power is really all about.”

And what is that? According to Mr. Kurtz, Power “shares Noam Chomsky’s foreign-policy goals. … 1960s revolutionary Tom Hayden treats [Power] as a fellow radical.” She “wrote a book aiming to turn an anti-American, anti-Israel, Marxist-inspired, world-government-loving United Nations bureaucrat into a popular hero.” All in all, she is “a patriot’s nightmare — a woman determined to subordinate America’s national sovereignty to an international order largely controlled by leftist bureaucrats. ... more deeply, her goal is to use our shared horror at the worst that human beings can do in order to institute an ever-broadening regime of redistributive transnational governance.”

“Interesting if true,” you say? And I’ll bet you can’t wait to see the evidence. Well, tough luck, reader. There isn’t going to be any because, sadly, “Power embodies a style of pragmatic radicalism that Obama shares. Both Obama and Power are skilled at placing their ultimate ideological goals just out of sight.” What’s more, Kurtz has discerned a “continual contradiction and dissembling in Power’s writings, as the ideology driving the action can neither fully disguise itself, nor fully announce itself either. So, too, with Barack Obama’s policies.” That’s how they get you.

OK, too bad for that. What about Power’s love for Noam Chomsky? Is it because, in a long review in The New York Times Book Review, she wrote:

For Chomsky … America, the prime oppressor, can do no right, while the sins of those categorized as oppressed receive scant mention. Because he deems American foreign policy inherently violent and expansionist, he is unconcerned with the motives behind particular policies, or the ethics of particular individuals in government. And since he considers the United States the leading terrorist state, little distinguishes American air strikes in Serbia undertaken at night with high-precision weaponry from World Trade Center attacks timed to maximize the number of office workers who have just sat down with their morning coffee.

Or is it because she wrote of Chomsky’s work that “he meets official falsehoods with exaggerations of his own,” with “far-fetched claims that he doesn't adequately back up.” Perhaps it is because she wrote, “Chomsky is wrong to think that individuals within the American government are not thinking seriously about the costs of alliances with repressive regimes; he is also wrong to suggest that it would be easy to get the balance right between liberty and security, or democracy and equality -- or to figure out what the hell to do about Pakistan.”

No, apparently it’s because “Power makes it clear that she largely shares Chomsky’s policy goals, above all the curbing of American power via the building up of international law and related doctrines of ‘human rights.’” If the support of human rights and international law are what people imagine when they hear the words “Noam Chomsky’s foreign policy goals,” then he is a far more benign critic of U.S. foreign policy than anybody on earth has likely ever suggested. It’s like saying Power and Chomsky are identical because they often eat toast for breakfast.

Can Power also be accurately described as a “fellow radical” of Tom Hayden’s? True, Hayden recently wrote that Power saw “war as an instrument to achieving her liberal, even radical, values.” Kurtz might have mentioned, however, that he did not mean this as a compliment. In the same article, he continued:

While carefully separating herself from President George W. Bush’s policies in Iraq, she endorsed the Army and Marine Counterinsurgency Field Manual associated with Gen. David Petraeus and co-produced with Power’s close colleague Sarah Sewall at the Harvard Center for Human Rights. Power believed that counterinsurgency provided greater protection for civilians, despite mounting evidence of Iraq’s secret prisons, torture chambers, thousands of civilian casualties and top-secret assassination operations carried out by Lt. General Stanley McChrystal in 2006, described in Bob Woodward’s The War Within. Liberal interventionists cringed at the outcome in Iraq, but Power apparently thought the counterinsurgency doctrine was a step towards greater emphasis on human rights.

Does that sound like props to a comrade-in-arms peacenik to you?

And what were Vieira de Mello’s ideological crimes that earn him the “anti-American, anti-Israel, Marxist-inspired, world-government-loving” epithet? Well, that’s not so clear. Kurtz repeats the “intense anti-Americanism and anti-capitalism” charge, as well as the “bitter critic of Israel” attack, but provides no evidence for either one. Just about the only crime of this U.N. official he does specify is the fact that “he carried around a well-worn copy of the U.N. Charter the way an American senator or Supreme Court justice might take a copy of the U.S. Constitution wherever he went.” Apparently, Kurtz believes Brazilian U.N. officials should carry around the U.S. Constitution—or perhaps copies of Atlas Shrugged—all 1,088 pages.

Kurtz goes on in this vein, warning his readers that Power is leading the president down a path that “may someday enable the leftist Europeans who run it to place American soldiers and politicians on trial for supposed war crimes,” and “may one day make virtually any use of force not pre-approved by the United Nations subject to international sanctions.”

The evidence for the above is about as strong as one might expect, especially when one considers what passes for evidence when Kurtz is being sufficiently careful to use the word “may.” Of course, the point of all the above is not really Ms. Power at all. It’s that one can write opinionated conservative journalism, as Mr. Heilbrunn has done, in a fashion in which truth counts and respect for not only evidence but the views with which one disagrees is evident.

It would be a better world if these were the conservatives who actually spoke for the conservative movement in the United States. Instead what we get is mostly dishonest hacks like Stanley Kurtz; character assassins and ideological obsessives whose wild accusations do not even stand up to the scrutiny of the links provided in their own articles. Sadly, it is Kurtz, not Heilbrunn, who is the true voice of American conservatism.

Eric Alterman is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress and a Distinguished Professor of English at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism. He is also a columnist for The Nation, The Forward, and The Daily Beast. His newest book is Kabuki Democracy: The System vs. Barack Obama.




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