Michael Moore | Dear Gov. Snyder: You Have to Go to Jail
Michael Moore, Michael Moore's Facebook Page
Moore writes: "You have effectively poisoned, not just some, but apparently ALL of the children in my hometown of Flint, Michigan. And for that, you have to go to jail."
READ MORE
Michael Moore, Michael Moore's Facebook Page
Moore writes: "You have effectively poisoned, not just some, but apparently ALL of the children in my hometown of Flint, Michigan. And for that, you have to go to jail."
READ MORE
Trooper Who Arrested Sandra Bland Indicted by Grand Jury on Perjury Charge, Will Be Fired
Mark Berman, The Washington Post
Berman writes: "A grand jury in Texas indicted the state trooper who arrested Sandra Bland, the 28-year-old black woman who later died in a county jail last summer."
READ MORE
Mark Berman, The Washington Post
Berman writes: "A grand jury in Texas indicted the state trooper who arrested Sandra Bland, the 28-year-old black woman who later died in a county jail last summer."
READ MORE
Amanda Marcotte | Revolting Gun Nuts Panic as Obama Takes Action
Amanda Marcotte, Salon
Marcotte writes: "Until conservatives are willing to say who is currently being denied guns that should be allowed to have them, they don't have a leg to stand on defending this massive loophole."
READ MORE
Amanda Marcotte, Salon
Marcotte writes: "Until conservatives are willing to say who is currently being denied guns that should be allowed to have them, they don't have a leg to stand on defending this massive loophole."
READ MORE
Elizabeth Warren Praises Bernie Sanders for His Wall Street Speech
Nick Gass, Politico
Gass writes: "Though she has not yet endorsed a presidential candidate, Sen. Elizabeth Warren on Wednesday offered some strong praise for Bernie Sanders."
READ MORE
Nick Gass, Politico
Gass writes: "Though she has not yet endorsed a presidential candidate, Sen. Elizabeth Warren on Wednesday offered some strong praise for Bernie Sanders."
READ MORE
China's Stock Market Plunges Again, Stoking Troubles Worldwide
Bill Chappell, NPR
Chappell writes: "Another sharp drop forced China's stock market to close less than 30 minutes after trading began Thursday, and investors in the U.S. and elsewhere expect another rough day."
READ MORE
Bill Chappell, NPR
Chappell writes: "Another sharp drop forced China's stock market to close less than 30 minutes after trading began Thursday, and investors in the U.S. and elsewhere expect another rough day."
READ MORE
Politicians Use North Korea H-Bomb Fears to Pitch Wasteful Missile Defense Projects
Lee Fang, The Intercept
"Since the early 1990s, politicians of both parties have cited the threat of North Korea to demand funding for an array of missile defense programs that quickly became monumental examples of government waste."
READ MORE
Lee Fang, The Intercept
"Since the early 1990s, politicians of both parties have cited the threat of North Korea to demand funding for an array of missile defense programs that quickly became monumental examples of government waste."
READ MORE
Canadian Company Sues the Obama Administration for Rejecting Keystone XL Pipeline
Christopher Guly, Los Angeles Times
Guly writes: "The Canadian company that proposed a 2,639-mile cross-border pipeline to the U.S. Gulf Coast is suing the Obama administration for rejecting it last November."
READ MORE
Christopher Guly, Los Angeles Times
Guly writes: "The Canadian company that proposed a 2,639-mile cross-border pipeline to the U.S. Gulf Coast is suing the Obama administration for rejecting it last November."
READ MORE
The Keystone Steele City pumping station, into which the planned Keystone XL pipeline is to
connect to, is seen in Steele City, Nebraska. (photo: Nati Harnik/AP)
he Canadian company that proposed a 2,639-mile cross-border pipeline to the U.S. Gulf Coast is suing the Obama administration for rejecting it last November.
In a lawsuit filed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas in Houston, Calgary-based TransCanada Corp. alleged that President Obama exceeded his constitutional power by denying construction of Keystone XL.
The lawsuit argues that the U.S. Constitution “expressly commits regulation of domestic and international commerce to Congress,” which had passed legislation authorizing the construction.
The pipeline, which TransCanada first proposed in 2008, would have helped deliver up to 900,000 barrels of crude oil daily from the tar sands of the Canadian province of Alberta through the U.S. Great Plains and to the Gulf Coast.
In a statement Wednesday, TransCanada said the U.S. State Department acknowledged the presidential denial wasn’t based on the project’s merits: “Rather, it was a symbolic gesture based on speculation about the perceptions of the international community regarding the Administration’s leadership on climate change and the President’s assertion of unprecedented, independent powers.”
Russ Girling, the company president and chief executive, was more biting in November in his criticism of the decision when he accused the Obama administration of appearing “to have said yes to more oil imports from Iran and Venezuela, over oil from Canada, the United States’ strongest ally and trading partner [and] a country with rule of law and values consistent with the U.S.”
Girling said that “misplaced symbolism was chosen over merit and science” and that “rhetoric won out over reason.”
In addition to the lawsuit, TransCanada filed a notice of intent to initiate a claim Wednesday under Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement seeking to recover more than $15 billion in costs and damages it alleges it suffered “from the United States’s breach of its NAFTA obligations.”
It echoes the lawsuit in arguing that the Obama administration felt it “necessary to demonstrate U.S. leadership on climate change” by denying the cross-border permit, “even though the Administration concluded multiple times that the pipeline would have no significant impact on climate change.”
However, Canadian Green Party Leader Elizabeth May said she expects that TransCanada will lose its NAFTA claim if not the lawsuit too.
“The larger economic power virtually always wins,” said May, a lawyer by training and the only Green Member of Parliament in Canada’s House of Commons.
No Canadian company has so far succeeded in a Chapter 11 claim against the U.S. government.
TransCanada “can huff and puff and complain, but the U.S. made the right decision” in rejecting Keystone XL, May said.
The company also announced on Wednesday that it expects to report a multibillion-dollar after-tax writedown in its fourth-quarter results due to the permit denial.
http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/34471-canadian-company-sues-the-obama-administration-for-rejecting-keystone-xl-pipeline
No comments:
Post a Comment