Home

About
- Who We Are
- Community Guidelines
- Right to Respond

Advertising on BOR
- Advertise on BOR
- Buy on all Texas Blogs

Advertisements

Search




Advanced Search


oil

What Americans Think About Energy & Drilling…


by: liberaltexan

Tue Jul 29, 2008 at 04:36 PM CDT

According to a recent poll, by Belden, Russonello & Stewart, more Americans support investing in new energy technology rather than expanding oil exploration and drilling.  
There's More... :: (1 Comments, 93 words in story)

Link between Energy companies' contributions and McCain's drilling flip-flop?


by: Citizen Andy

Wed Jun 18, 2008 at 07:17 AM CDT

According to CREW, John McCain is the single biggest recipient of money from big oil.  See: http://opensecrets.org/pres08/...

Given that McCain is now trying to wriggle out of public financing so he can take even more money from big donors and lobbyists, can we assume that his flip-flop on offshore drilling off the Gulf Coast has anything to do with his donor base?  But I guess this is what 3/4 of a million dollars collected in $2300 chunks and bundled by high-powered lobbyists will get you.  

So I ask, are we that cheap?  If that's all that it takes to overturn a ban implemented by the first President Bush almost 20 years ago, then that is money well spent by industry.

Coming soon: why offshore drilling is an economic loser, an ecological disaster waiting to happen, and why it will continue our addiction to foreign oil and greenhouse gases, not ease us off them.

"this post does not reflect the views of anyone or any other organization other than Citizen Andy, and even then not all the time."
Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Cornyn + Hutchinson: Fighting for Big Oil


by: RoCoDemsPrez

Thu Dec 13, 2007 at 02:57 PM CST

( - promoted by Karl-Thomas Musselman)

During the 2006 election cycle, Kay Bailey Hutchinson was the top recipient of contributions from the oil & gas industry. For the upcoming 2008 election, our senator John Cornyn is the top recipient of money from big oil in the senate.

So when the a recent energy bill came before the senate which called for a rollback of tax breaks for oil companies, both Cornyn and Hutchinson (unsurprisingly) voted against the bill:

President Bush had threatened to veto any energy bill that raised taxes. The House passed a bill with higher taxes on oil companies last week.

Texas Sens. John Cornyn and Kay Bailey Hutchison both voted against the motion to move the bill forward. Ms. Hutchison had negotiated to strip out the higher taxes on oil and gas producers.

(source)

There you have it- Cornyn and Hutchinson siding with both the White House and their campaign contributors.

Apparently, despite the fact that there was across the aisle support for the bill ("There is no reason why we shouldn't pass the energy bill today" Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-KY) and the other provisions that would "boost the nation's use of renewable energy, set new efficiency standards for appliances and - most dramatically - set aggressive new fuel mileage requirements for cars, trucks and sport utility vehicles", some Senate Republicans (not pointing any fingers) looked past that because of money received from certain exploitive corporations.

Because of these Republicans, the tax hike on big oil is going to be removed from the bill and it will be reintroduced. At least we still have some energy reforms to look forward to. (source)

Discuss :: (3 Comments)

The Powerful Positive Of A Thousand Small Green Steps.


by: jamesboyce

Mon Jun 25, 2007 at 05:15 PM CDT

The awareness phase of the campaign to stop global warming has reached a crescendo, which may also be a plateau. With the exception of front groups sponsored by oil companies, it is becoming more and more accepted that we, in fact, are the cause of global warming.

The action phase, however, trails the awareness phase significantly and most troubling of all is the growing belief that someone else is going to be the somebody to actually do something about global warming. Even worse, and most naively of all, that our federal government is going to solve the problem.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 445 words in story)

Daily Planet Extra: “Carter is from Mars”


by: mbh4c

Wed Jun 28, 2006 at 08:20 AM CDT

I thought that was the only way we'd ever get the local Austin paper  to cover my Congressional race - if we could prove that my opponent, the incumbent Republican Congressman, John Carter was an alien. Nope, turns out he's only been marooned on Mars - and that was exposed by a Houston paper first.

So does that make him an illegal alien? ah, sweet irony... But I digress.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 317 words in story)

Oil, What is it Good For?


by: stepwinder

Tue May 09, 2006 at 04:03 PM CDT

Presidential speechifying (thank you K-T for including this graphic in yesterday's Round-Up).

Nixon rallied against Big Oil while Ford declared high prices on foreign fuel stood between Americans and their destiny. Jimmy Carter dutifully insisted "the energy industry should not reap large unearned profits," while George H.W. Bush preached of a future based on diverse energy sources. Could he have predicted his son's confidence in switchgrass in 2006?

Talk, talk isn't enough and our politicians know it. Today it's all about the photo op. Dennis Hastert was on top of his game before lunging for his SUV and the security only it can provide .  Let's also give Congress credit for the new ideas they've brought to the table. There was the $100 rebate decried as insulting until a wild-eyed Dem proposed a $500 rebate (that's insult x 5). If the public insists on more than words and pictures (this time), our representatives are prepared to buy votes! When is the last time Washington was that honest with us?

In the days after September 11th, our patriotic duty required shopping. Today it demands we step on the gas. If Congress can keep us driving, perhaps we won't ask questions about our foreign policy and how it relates to this current crisis at the pump.

Our elected representatives are serious....seriously concerned their campaigns for re-election can't run on empty. What do Kay Bailey Hutcihson, Tom DeLay and Rick Santorum have in common? Besides being three people I hope I don't meet in heaven, they're at the top of a list that might explain our being stuck in nuetral for over 30 years:

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 221 words in story)

<< Previous
2012 Texas Elections
Texas Elections Previews:
-- Congressional Preview
-- State Senate Preview
-- State House Preview
-- State House: D Primaries

BOR Original Series:
-- Senate Showdown
-- Travis County Primaries


BOR Endorsements
2012 Democratic Primary

US Senate: Sean Hubbard

Congressional Races:
CD-10: Tawana Cadien
CD-14: Nick Lampson
CD-16: Silvestre Reyes
CD-20: Joaquin Castro
CD-21: Candace Duval
CD-22: KP George
CD-23: Pete Gallego
CD-30: Taj Clayton
CD-33: Marc Veasey
CD-35: Lloyd Doggett

Travis County Races:
DA: Rosemary Lehmberg
Sheriff: John Sisson
Tax/VR: Bruce Elfant
167th: David Wahlberg
Commissioners
Pct 1: Franklin or Gonzales
Pct 3: Karen Huber
Constables
Pct 1: Danny Thomas
Pct 2: Paul Labuda
Pct 3: Sally Hernandez
Pct 4: Maria Canchola
Pct 5: Carlos Lopez

State House Endorsements:
HD-43: Y. Gonzalez Toureilles
HD-74: Poncho Nevarez
HD-75: Mary Gonzalez
HD-90: Lon Burnam
HD-95: Nicole Collier
HD-101: Chris Turner
HD-110: Toni Rose
HD-117: Tina Torres
HD-125: Justin Rodriguez
HD-131: Alma Allen
HD-137: Joe Carlos Madden
HD-144: Mary Ann Perez
HD-147: Garnet Coleman

Select County Chairs

Early Voting: May 14-25
Election Day: Tues. May 29


Connect With BOR
Your source for Texas politics.

On Facebook: BOR
On Twitter: @BOR
On Tumblr: BOR
On Pinterest:
Rick Perry's Rental Mansion

Need A Vendor?
Check out BOR's Progressive Vendor Page for campaigns and non-profits.


Original Cartoons


This week:
"Secret Service"


Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Shared On Facebook

Advertisement

Best of Texas Left
- (Complete Directory)
- B & B
- Bay Area Houston
- Blue Bloggin
- Bluedaze
- Brains and Eggs
- Capitol Annex
- Collin County Democrats
- Collin County Observer
- Community Forum
- Dog Canyon
- Dos Centavos
- Easter Lemming Liberal
- Eye on Williamson County
- Feet to the Fire
- Grading Texas
- Greg's Opinion
- Grits for Breakfast
- Half Empty
- Houtopia
- In the Pink Texas
- Kiss My Big Blue Butt
- Letters from Texas
- McBlogger
- Mean Rachel
- Musings
- North Texas Liberal
- Off the Kuff
- Panhandle Truth Squad
- Para Justicia y Libertad!
- Pink Dome
- San Antonio Mayor
- South Texas Chisme
- StoudDemBlog
- Texas Clover Leaf
- Texas Kaos
- The Caucus Blog
- There..Already
- Three Wise Men
Best of Texas Right
- Blogs of War
- BlogHouston
- Boots and Sabers
- Lone Star Times
- Publius TX
- Rick Perry vs the World
- Safety for Dummies
- Slightly Rough
- Urban Grounds
Other Texas Reads
- Burka Blog
- D Magazine
- DOT Show
- Statesman Elections
- Strong Political Analysis
- Texas Monthly
- Texas Observer
- The Texas Blue
- Quorum Report Daily Buzz
Around Austin
- Austin Bloggers
- Austin Chronicle
- Austin Contrarian
- Austin Metblogs
- Austin on Two Wheels
- Austin Real Estate Blog
- Austin Statesman
- Austin Texas Bike Shit Stuff
- Austin Towers
- Austinist
- Capital MetroBlog
- Daily Texan
- Do512
- Downtown Austin Blog
- East Austinite
- Elise Hu
-
Flash Mob Austin
- Keep Austin Blue
- M1EK
- Travis County Democrats
- University Democrats
TX Progressive Orgs
- ACLU Legislative Blog
- Atticus Circle
- Criminal Justice Coalition
- Equality Texas
- NOW Texas
- PFAW Texas
- Public Citizen
- SEIU Texas
- Tejano Insider
- Texas AFT
- Texas HDCC
- Texas Watch
- TFN
- TSTA
- TSEU
- Texas Young Democrats
- United Ways of Texas
TX Elections/Returns
- TX Returns 1992-present
- TX Media/Candidate List

- Bexar County
- Collin County
- Dallas county
- Denton County
- El Paso County
- Fort Bend County
- Harris County
- Jefferson County
- Tarrant County
- Travis County

- CNN 1998 Returns
- CNN 2000 Returns
- CNN 2002 Returns
- CNN 2004 Returns
- CNN 2006 Returns
- CNN 2008 Returns
Traffic Ratings
- Alexa Rating
- Quantcast Ratings
-
Syndication

Burnt Orange Reporters
Publisher: Karl-Thomas M.
Editor-in-Chief: Katherine H.
Contributor: Phillip M.
Senior Writer: Michael H.
Staff Writer: Adam S.
Staff Writer: Ben S.
Staff Writer: Chaille J.
Staff Writer: Edward G.
Staff Writer: Emily C.
Founder: Byron L.

Read staff bios here.

Powered by: SoapBlox