Deep Thinkers

Think Progress » Matalin On Global Warming: ‘A Largely Unscientific Hoax,’ A ‘Political Concoction’ 

This week, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer discussed the right wing’s tepid support of Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) with right-wing activist Mary Matalin. Matalin explained that McCain is out of step with the far right on several issues, in particular global warming, which many conservatives “loathe” discussing:

BLITZER: They loathe that?

MATALIN: Because it’s a largely unscientific hoax. And it’s a political concoction.

Watch it:

Echoing Matalin, former House Majority Leader Tom Delay (R-TX) recently said that “there is no science to suggest that man is the cause of climate change.” These claims are laughable. As Science Magazine noted, in addition to the IPCC and National Academy of Sciences, there is overwhelming agreement that the causes of global warming are man-made.

Matalin observed that “you haven’t heard [McCain] prioritizing” climate change recently: “What you’ve been hearing him say since he’s achieved the nomination…is to prioritize security issues,” which are less controversial on the right.

(HT: TheGreenMiles)

Think Progress » Matalin On Global Warming: ‘A Largely Unscientific Hoax,’ A ‘Political Concoction’

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Think Progress » GM exec: global warming still a ‘crock of sh*t.’ 

Reuters reports that GM Vice Chairman Bob Lutz defended his previous remarks dismissing global warming as a “total crock of shit.” Lutz said his views had no bearing on GM’s commitment to build environmentally-friendly vehicles. He added that those “spewing virtual vitriol” at him for disparaging climate change were “missing the big picture.” “My thoughts on what has or hasn’t been the cause of climate change have nothing to do with the decisions I make,” Lutz alleged.

Think Progress » GM exec: global warming still a ‘crock of sh*t.’

Scare Tactics

Spy Law Lapse Blamed for Lost Information 

By Dan Eggen and Ellen Nakashima

Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, February 23, 2008; Page A03

The Bush administration said yesterday that the government “lost intelligence information” because House Democrats allowed a surveillance law to expire last week, causing some telecommunications companies to refuse to cooperate with terrorism-related wiretapping orders.

But hours later, administration officials told lawmakers that the final holdout among the companies had relented and agreed to fully participate in the surveillance program, according to an official familiar with the issue.

The assertions and revisions marked the latest developments in the battle over the Protect America Act, a temporary surveillance law broadening the government’s spying powers that expired last Saturday.

Spy Law Lapse Blamed for Lost Information – washingtonpost.com

Straight talk?

McCain Disputed On 1999 Meeting – washingtonpost.com 

By James V. Grimaldi and Jeffrey H. Birnbaum

Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, February 23, 2008; Page A01

Broadcaster Lowell “Bud” Paxson yesterday contradicted statements from Sen. John McCain‘s presidential campaign that the senator did not meet with Paxson or his lobbyist before sending two controversial letters to the Federal Communications Commission on Paxson’s behalf.

Paxson said he talked with McCain in his Washington office several weeks before the Arizona Republican wrote the letters in 1999 to the FCC urging a rapid decision on Paxson’s quest to acquire a Pittsburgh television station.

Paxson also recalled that his lobbyist, Vicki Iseman, likely attended the meeting in McCain’s office and that Iseman helped arrange the meeting. “Was Vicki there? Probably,” Paxson said in an interview with The Washington Post yesterday. “The woman was a professional. She was good. She could get us meetings.”

The recollection of the now-retired Paxson conflicted with the account provided by the McCain campaign about the two letters at the center of a controversy about the senator’s ties to Iseman, a partner at the lobbying firm of Alcalde & Fay.

McCain Disputed On 1999 Meeting – washingtonpost.com

Duhbya’s Presidential Library

SMU to Host Bush’s Presidential Library – washingtonpost.com 

By Michael Abramowitz

Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, February 23, 2008; Page A02

President Bush‘s future presidential library and public policy institute will be housed at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, officials announced yesterday, launching a project that could require hundreds of millions of dollars in private donations.

SMU to Host Bush’s Presidential Library – washingtonpost.com

Your Can’t Spell White Without Duhbya!

New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan 

Darren White
It appears the campaign of ABQ GOP US House hopeful Darren White has figured out that calling for “victory” in Iraq is not the most persuasive argument to attract needed Democratic votes. When he announced his candidacy in October the Bernalillo County Sheriff had Dems jumping out of their chairs when he said: “Our troops must return in victory.” Not that there’s anything wrong with victory. It’s just that most voters in the moderate district don’t think of victory in the way White intimated. They want the war wound down, not up. It appears White’s campaign has recognized their blunder because in his most recent statement on his Web site the “V word” is gone with the wind.
In October the congressional hopeful said:
“Unfortunately, mistakes have been made by those in Washington. And the Iraqi government has not stepped up like they need to. They must be pushed harder…We all want to bring our troops home. And I will work to do just that. But our troops must return in victory, because Al Qaeda must be denied a sanctuary in Iraq…
Fast forward to February:
It is critical that we deny al-Qaeda a sanctuary in Iraq, which would only provide the terrorists a safe haven to launch attacks against America. Let’s also be honest, success in Iraq involves much more than military action alone. To bring our troops home, we must implement measures of accountability, both militarily and politically….”
The war has taken on renewed importance in the ABQ congressional race because probable GOP Prez nominee John McCain has said American troops could be stationed there for 100 years–a statement the Dems are sure to try to hang around the neck of White. Because the Sheriff is most identified with the public safety and the national security, any inroads the Dems could make on the issue could be unusually rewarding. White’s move to notch down the Iraq rhetoric seems to be recognition of that. It’s not only Dems watching. ABQ GOP State Senator Joe Carraro is also seeking the GOP nomination.

New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan

Daily Lobo – Republicans gather for Pre-Primary Convention

Republicans gather for Pre-Primary Convention

By: Bryan Gibel
Posted: 2/18/08

The polls may show Rep. Tom Udall beating his Republican opponents in New Mexico’s 2008 Senate race, but the party is working overtime to make sure that doesn’t happen.
About 1,000 Republicans met at the party’s Bernalillo County Pre-Primary Convention on Sunday, where they heard campaign speeches by Republican contenders for the November congressional elections.
Republican Party of New Mexico spokesman Scott Darnell said the stakes are high in the 2008 congressional races.
“The fact that we have three open House seats and one open Senate seat means that Republicans are going to be energized and will have a lot of choices to make before now and the primary,” he said. “They have excellent candidates in each race.”
Reps. Heather Wilson and Steve Pearce are running against each other in the Republican primary for the Senate seat being vacated by Pete Domenici, who will not run for re-election.
Wilson, who spoke at the convention, said she is the Republican with the best chance to make it to the Senate.
“It is up to the Republican Party to nominate a conservative who can beat Tom Udall in the race for the Senate,” she said. “They’ve thrown all kinds of polls at me, and yet I’ve shown I can win in a tough district again and again and again.”
She said she is stronger on issues of national defense than Pearce and voted to beef up New Mexico’s border protection while Pearce voted against it.
Wilson also said she has done more than any other candidate to support the military in New Mexico.
“Tom Udall brought forward a spending bill that would have cut 3,000 jobs from our national laboratories and devastated our ability to secure our nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile,” she said. “Steve, you voted to cut an extra $1.3 billion and thousands of more jobs from our nuclear deterrent. And to me, that defies common sense.”
Pearce said he is more conservative than Wilson and can do a better job than her rallying the party’s conservative base.
“I stand proudly as a conservative and say that my core values are my faith, family, my service and freedom,” he said. “In our hearts and souls, we must decide the moral basis for this country. I tell you that in that cultural struggle, we’re either going to choose rightly or wrongly, and our nation is going to ride on the outcome of that.”
Pearce said he polls well among conservative Hispanic voters because he has taken a strong stance against abortion.
He said he has also fought tax increases more aggressively than Wilson and has done a better job cutting waste on spending.
The differences between the two candidates are clear in their voting records, Pearce said.
“I am the only New Mexican in the delegation in Washington to vote against cloning and stem cell research on embryos,” he said. “I am the only member of the New Mexico delegation to support the (troop) surge (in Iraq) without exception. I believe that we must be on offense in the war on terror.”
Darnell said the convention Sunday chose 156 of the 437 total delegates for the Republican Party’s state pre-primary convention, which will be held March 15.
He said the convention will determine the ballot order for New Mexico’s Republican primary.
It will also indicate who will be the front runner for the party’s nomination for Senate, he said.
“The winner of the state convention will be on top of the ballot,” Darnell said. “That also has some media importance, because the winner is the candidate who obviously won the most support from the Republican Party’s activists and the party as a whole, which dictates what it means to be a Republican.”

Daily Lobo – Republicans gather for Pre-Primary Convention

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New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan 

All eyes were on US Senate candidates Heather Wilson and Steve Pearce. Our GOP Alligators report there was some good news for each. Heather, teaming with ABQ GOP Congressional candidate Darren White who is seeking the seat she is giving up to pursue the Senate seat, scored a big win in the Bernalillo delegate count. Pearce was unable to dent her in her home base. Meanwhile, Pearce picked up more delegates than expected in neighboring, but much smaller Sandoval county.
The only poll we’ve seen is a mid-January survey that had Steve at 38% and Heather at 33%, but the poll’s margin of error was enough to make the race dead even. Wilson was acting like the underdog in her Sunday speech before several hundred GOP delegates at the ABQ Marriott. Wilson attacked Pearce for allegedly supporting the proposal to mothball Cannon Air Force Base in Clovis. The Pearce campaign points out there were high profile news releases showing the state’s entire congressional delegation supported converting Cannon to a new mission, and that’s what was approved. KOAT-TV news reported Pearce chose not to fire any volleys at Heather.
The ABQ US House primary between Sheriff White and ABQ GOP Senator Joe Carraro was also on the weekend agenda. White is perceived to have a wide lead. Talk at the Marriott was whether Carraro will be able to win the required 20% of the delegates at the March pre-primary to get on the June ballot.

New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan