Davis Calls for New Domestic Oil Exploration & Nuclear Production

Logo for Jack Davis CampaignDemocratic candidate Jack Davis, no stranger to independent thought, has called for opening up ANWAR National Wildlife Refuge and coastal regions for domestic oil production as well as an increase in the nations nuclear power plants. He is also calling for investment in alternative energy and conservation.

“Those profiting from the status quo want you to be afraid. Afraid of nuclear energy, afraid of drilling in Alaska, afraid of drilling in shallow and deep water off our coasts. We don’t need to be afraid.”

While all three of those measures are being heavily pushed by the Republican Party, Davis’ own Democratic Party has come out staunchly against them. Davis’ two primary contenders are calling for increasing investment in alternative energy resource but I have yet to see definitive positions on nuclear energy or domestic oil production. Attempts are being made to get official responses from the campaigns.

Davis has a long history of supporting ideas and policies that run counter to the national and local Democratic Parties. A Republican for fifty years Davis left that Party because of its trade policies but has remained a vocal critic of illegal immigration, gun control laws, excessive taxation and pork-barrel spending.

NY-26: Jon Powers addresses John McCain’s Free Trade Policy

In light of recent comments by Presidential hopeful Senator John McCain (R-AZ), stating that “You gotta stand on principle. I believe in the principle of free trade” plus this video, Democratic candidate for Congress in NY-26, Jon Powers, released the following statement:

“John McCain is engaging in a free trade tour through the hemisphere touting his willingness to negotiate with ‘almost any country willing to negotiate fairly with us.’ When he comes to Western New York, I hope he sees that free trade created jobs in Mexico, not here,” Powers said.

“When I talk to working men and women across the district they’re not looking for an advantage; they’re looking for a level playing field. They understand it is important that we enforce labor and environmental standards.

“We do have to stand on principle. I stand up for the working men and women of Western New York.”

Powers has been endorsed by the New York State AFL-CIO, Western New York Council of the Communications Workers of America; Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 22; National Association of Letter Carriers, Branch 3; and UNITE-HERE, Rochester Regional Joint Board in the past week.

McCain may believe in the principle of free trade but his actions don’t support the practice of helping Americans keep jobs.  Jon Powers stands on principle and follows through with actions and plans that will help Western New Yorkers.

ShareThis

NY-13 heating up

Out of six House seats currently held by Republicans in New York State, four are facing tough races — NY-25, NY-26, and NY-29, locally, and NY-13, in Staten Island, where Vito Fossella was decided not to seek re-election after a DUI and the news that he had fathered an out-of-wedlock child. Although the district is not as Democratic as NY-25, it is now being rated as “Democrat favored” by Congressional Quarterly. There’s also this news:

The committee reserved $2.1 million on costly New York City broadcast media time on behalf of city councilman Mike McMahon, the likely Democratic nominee in retiring Rep. Vito Fossella’s Staten Island district.

It will be interesting to see if the DCCC starts reserving air time in this area on behalf of Maffei, Powers, and Massa.

ShareThis

NY-29: Massa calls for 120-day freeze on gas prices, concerned for rural Americans

Image Courtesy Massa for Congress
Image Courtesy Massa for Congress
Image Courtesy Massa for Congress
Image Courtesy Massa for Congress
Eric Massa, Democratic candidate for Congress in NY-29 opposing Rep. Randy Kuhl (R-Hammondsport), held a press conference today on the price of gasoline and how that stems from paying for the war in Iraq, our country’s dependence on Saudi Arabia, and how this affects our economy and the well-being of rural Americans.  Here, excerpts:

Massa began with today’s front page editorial in USA Today (article excerpted here):

Soaring gas prices are a double-whammy for many rural residents: They often pay more than people who live in cities and suburbs because of the expense of hauling fuel to their communities, and they must drive greater distances for life’s necessities: work, groceries, medical care and, of course, gas.

Meanwhile, incomes typically are lower in rural areas, making increasingly high gas prices an especially urgent concern. Rural households also are more likely to have older, less fuel-efficient vehicles such as pickups, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) says. The average age of a vehicle in a rural household: 8.7 years, compared with 7.9 years for an urban vehicle.

Rural residents do more driving, too — an average of 3,100 miles a year more than urban dwellers, the FHWA says.

Massa said “We are the canaries in the coal mine,” presumably referring to the notion that if rural America fails then so does the rest of the country because of farmers and other blue collar workers that support the economy’s infrastructure.  Massa went on to say (bold mine):

There is no mass transit alternative really of any significant kind.  In rural America where we live there aren’t many alternatives.

Yesterday King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia told us to get used to high gas prices.  This morning the Saudi government through their Ministry of Oil said clearly they’re not going to increase production any higher, they’ve already increased production.  This is not a supply and demand problem.

The fact that the price of gas that is threatening to shut down rural towns is a direct result of the Bush administration’s devaluation of the dollar; they’re doing it to pay for the war in Iraq.  It’s time for us to declare ourselves independent of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia.  We’re not going to do this via 3rd grade promises:  [Kuhl says] if we drill in ANWR the price of gas will drop to less than $3/gal.

Kuhl said very clearly if the Democrats have their way the price of gas will be $3.93/gallon and if Republicans have their way it would be $2.47/gallon.  It’s political pablum and nonsense.

[Kuhl may call me] a socialist because I care about the well-being of rural Americans more than the oil company profits.

[For example,] the CEO of [Exxon Mobil] retired with a $400 million bonus.  It’s time to do what President Richard Nixon did in the 1970s, which is to freeze the price of gas at the pump for 120 days.

Massa makes very good points.  I just returned from a trip to rural America and I met many people who said they are trading in their trucks that they need for work hauling equipment and supplies, which threatens their jobs.  Many people have quit jobs that require a long commute and still others have lost income due to the cost of gas being more than the profits of the job itself.  This may be hard for more suburban and city dwellers to understand but, for many rural Americans, living paycheck to paycheck is a lifelong reality and gas prices cut into their income significantly.  An increase in $50 a week in costs can make the difference between buying groceries or a doctor’s visit, all of which negatively impacts the health of rural Americans.  It is a domino effect in essence.

When asked about Kuhl’s trip to Brazil on energy alternatives, Massa said:

Whatever Kuhl learned in Brazil didn’t help any.

When asked about this winter and heating costs, Massa asserted:

The most practical commitment I can make as a candidate is to ensure home heating assistance, but that won’t happen until January and I think it will be too late by then.

New technologies create jobs.  Instead of offering tax incentives for SUVs, we should be offering tax incentives for new hybrids.  It would explode production and make them much more cost affordable.  If we’d done that at the beginning of the Bush administration we wouldn’t have so many sitting on lots waiting to be sold. If you keep on wanting to do more of the same, you know, small pork barrel handouts here and there, and the economy is spiraling down for the past 20 years, the same time Kuhl has been in office, then nothing will change.

When asked about refineries, Massa stated:

No one’s keeping oil companies from increasing refineries.  It’s not true that Democrats are keeping oil companies from increasing refineries.  It’s already happening.

Massa is correct.  In fact, the Sioux City Journal reported on June 4th of this year that Union County, South Dakota approved the zoning for an ordinance to land the nation’s first all-new refinery in 32 years.  However, this issue also hits rural Americans harder because the refinery, with its health implications, is literally in their backyard.  The votes were close but in the end concern for jobs and profits won.

Here is a list of oil refineries for your perusal.  If you want to read about oil refinery reform, go to RefineryReform.org.  Here is a list of Operable Capacity of U.S. Oil Refineries from the Energy Information Administration, which lists the U. S. refinery output as of January 1, 2007 at 17,443,492 barrels a day.  This supports Massa’s claim that this is not a supply and demand issue.

As a military member, what does Massa think of the debate between McCain, Wes Clark and Jim Webb:

I issued a whole essay on this.  No one that I’ve ever talked to has ever questoned McCain’s heroism or his military service.  The argument is not about John McCain of the U.S. Navy.  Veterans venerate him, as I do and always have.  I ate dinner with him and Clark in Panama.  Clark had a real friendsip and admiration for the man and I suspect he still does.  The issue is about his judgment to be Commander in Chief.  But how can a man like John McCain vote against the G.I. Bill?  That [raises] serious questions about his decision making.  How can a man like McCain question direct negotiations with our enemies?  It was direct negotiations that issued his release from Hanoi.  How can a man that was brutally tortured flip flop his votes on such a basic issue as torturing prisoners in Guantanamo?  These are issues of judgment.

I’m not running because I spent 24 years in the military.  I [do] have experience from those years though.

Why is it that people like Kuhl join him [McCain] and then turn around and say they support veterans?

One thing I have to say about Eric Massa is that he is well-informed.  Attending a press conference with Massa requires you to be alert and typing constantly because he is so well-versed in the issues and he has an opinion on seemingly all of them.  He’s a hard worker and a smart candidate who gets deeply the impact the Republican policies have had on our state and the nation, and Massa wants to do something, lots of things in fact, about them.

ShareThis

NY-26: Jon Powers’ campaign garners national attention

Jon Powers
Jon Powers
Jon Powers‘ campaign for the Congressional seat in NY-26 is gaining national attention.  Just in the past week the DCCC added Powers to their Red To Blue program, the New York State AFL-CIO endorsed Powers, and then there was the Supreme Court’s decision on the Millionaire’s Amendment.  Now the national websites are taking notice.  For example, The Hill, Roll Call and The Politico’s The Crypt blog have all featured posts about the DCCC’s and the Supreme Court’s actions.

Here, excerpts:

(From The Crypt)—the New York Democratic establishment has been squarely behind Powers. Powers has won the endorsement of all seven Democratic county chairs, and the New York AFL-CIO endorsed him last Friday. In addition, most Democratic members in the New York delegation have either donated to Powers’ campaign or campaigned with him.

(From The Hill)—

The DCCC said the decision was based on the fact that Powers has been the preeminent choice of several major unions and members of New York’s congressional delegation.

“Jon Powers will bring the leadership skills he used in Iraq to the issues facing western New York – bringing good paying jobs to the district and fighting to reduce gas prices for middle class families,” said DCCC Chairman Chris Van Hollen (Md.).

Then there’s the intensified local coverage of Powers’ strengthening campaign that stems from the national coverage:

(From Lockport Union-Sun & Journal today)—

Democratic congressional hopeful Jon Powers met with various labor union representatives at his Amherst campaign headquarters Monday.

The meeting emphasized an endorsement by the New York state AFL-CIO late last week.

The 2.5 million-member coalition decided to throw its weight behind Powers, one of four Democrats seeking the party’s nomination in a September primary, early. The decision is often reserved for conventions held in August.

There’s also this piece by The Buffalo News and this piece by the Democrat & Chronicle in Rochester.  This coverage is comprehensive and significant, indicating how strongly Powers’ campaign is resonating with voters.  After all, it is from the ground up, boots on the ground that is, that Powers’ campaign has grown, with seventy-five percent of the campaign’s contributors donating $50 or less.

William Blake once said that “Where there is money there is no art.” It could be amended to say that where there is endless money in politics there is no heart.  Other candidates may have more personal money to spend but Jon Powers is pouring his heart into this campaign, doing this hard work with people—the voices and support of Western New Yorkers—and the national media is taking notice.

ShareThis

Energy Mailer and Analysis

Dr. Denny at Scholars and Rogues has a long takedown of Randy Kuhl's latest energy mailer. I haven't seen the mailer, but it includes an energy plan that relies almost completely on new drilling and refining, and is based on completely specious arithmetic.

For example, his plan assumes $.70-$1.60 reduction in the per-gallon cost of gas from drilling in ANWR and other domestic sources. But the Department of Energy says that ANWR could reduce oil prices by $.75 per barrel.

Denny also looks at the Republican Energy Bill supported by Rep. Kuhl. It contains provisions like the following:

Prohibits the Nuclear Regulatory Commission from denying an application for nuclear waste disposal on the grounds of present or future insufficient capacity.

The whole piece is worth a read. If I get the mailer, I'll scan it and post it.

Christopher Lee Amherst Fundraiser Roundup

Logo for Christopher Lee Congressional CampaignThe Christopher Lee for Congress campaign held a fundraiser at the Buffalo-Niagara Marriott in Amherst yesterday and two bloggers, The Buffalo Bean and Politics NY were there to recap, the latter says they will have more on the event today.

The fundraiser was also attended by current Congressman Tom Reynolds who described the night as “a record setting fundraiser for an inaugural candidacy for anyone running for the United States House of Representatives.”

NY-26: Konst to drop bid for Congress against Powers; mulling challenging Volker for State Senate instead

What a day in NY-26!  From The Buffalo News:

Democrat Kathy Konst is expected to end her congressional candidacy tonight and instead launch a new campaign for the State Senate against veteran Republican Dale M. Volker, a source in her campaign said today.

This is a win-win for Democrats because, as Stlo7 pointed out to me when hearing this news, the threat there is now spreading good Democratic candidates across the field where they’re needed.  Add this nugget to the amazingly great day in the Jon Powers For Congress camp.  It’s possible the DCCC announcement earlier today affected Konst’s decision, given the momentum Powers’ campaign has gained.

ShareThis

NY-26: DCCC Chairman Van Hollen on Jon Powers’ campaign

The Chairman of the DCCC, Chris Van Hollen, had this to say today about Jon Powers‘ campaign for Congress in NY-26:

“Jon Powers has assembled a strong and dynamic campaign with strong grassroots support, local labor leaders, and all seven Democratic committees,”…Jon Powers will bring the leadership skills he used in Iraq to the issues facing western New York – bringing good paying jobs to the district and fighting to reduce gas prices for middle class families. The Red to Blue Program will give Jon the financial and structural edge to be even more competitive.”

From the remainder of the press release (bold mine):

Democratic congressional candidates running in open seats earned a spot in the competitive program by establishing significant local support, surpassing demanding fundraising goals and by skillfully showing voters that they stand for change and will represent new priorities. Powers is one of only 18 candidates in the Red to Blue program for open seats.

The Red to Blue program highlights top Democratic campaigns across the country, and offers them financial, communications, and strategic support.

Powers himself had this to say:

“This is a huge advantage for our campaign.  From the beginning, our campaign has focused on bringing the voice of Western New Yorkers back to Washington. Today we are receiving recognition that our message is resonating on a national level.”

This really is a significant development in Jon Powers’ campaign to represent Western New Yorkers in Congress because of the well-funded opposition he faces on both sides of the political aisle.  It’s a classic struggle of moneyed interests vs. the people’s interests—and Powers is fighting to ensure the people’s interests win.  Today’s announcement by the DCCC is one more tool Powers now has in the fight to bring the voice of the people back to Washington.

ShareThis

NY-26: Jon Powers garners more key labor endorsements

Image Courtesy Michael Parks
Image Courtesy Michael Parks
This just in from the Jon Powers campaign:

Jon Powers, Iraq War Veteran, former captain in the U.S. Army and the endorsed Democratic candidate in New York’s 26th congressional district, joined with local labor leaders to discuss issues affecting working men and women of Western New York.

Meeting with local labor leaders in Rochester and Amherst, Powers accepted the endorsement of several key labor unions including:

· Western New York Council of the Communications Workers of America

· Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 22

· National Association of Letter Carriers, Branch 3

· UNITE-HERE, Rochester Regional Joint Board

The announcement comes after Friday’s announcement of the New York State AFL-CIO for early endorsement for Powers.

This is turning out to be a great day for the Powers campaign.  The hard work he is doing going door to door and listening to the voters is emblematic of Powers’ approach to leading and labor groups have noticed, as evidenced by these comments:

“We are most impressed by his understanding of the needs of working men and women,” said Richard Lipsitz, Political Action Chair of the local AFL-CIO and member of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 264. “Jon made a strong impression on us when we saw he truly believed in creating a fair trade environment, a platform for building green jobs and understands that every American needs affordable health care.”

Jim Bertelone, President of the Rochester and Genesee Valley Area Labor Federation AFL-CIO and American Postal Wokers Union Local 215 said, “We finally have a candidate we believe will work for working families.”

This adds to an impressive and growing list of key endorsement for Powers:

:

· New York State AFL-CIO

· International Longshoremen’s Association

· International Organization of Masters, Mates & Pilots

· Sheet Metal Workers, Local 46

· New York State Council of Machinists

· Service Employees International Union, Local 1199

· American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Local 264

· International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Joint Council No. 46

· United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 1

· International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers, Local 3

· United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service Workers Industrial Union, District 4

· International Union of Painters & Allied Trades, District 4

· International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 86

· American Postal Workers, Rochester S/C Area Local

· Niagara County Building Trades

· Transport Workers Union of America

ShareThis

Page 1 of 13 (124 posts)    >>
 
s