Foreign Policy Blogs

Tag Archives: US Senate

Climate and Energy – The Senate Bill

Climate and Energy – The Senate Bill

David Leonhardt, an economics columnist and blogger for the “NY Times,” has just taken a good swing at the compelling arguments for a cap-and-trade bill.  See Saving Energy, and Its Cost.   (For a recent post from me on this and an exchange with an opponent, see The Facts of Cap and Trade.)  Leonhardt has about […]

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After Health Care

After Health Care

Okay, the Obama Administration is gathering up the laurel wreaths for its landmark victory on health care reform.  Nancy Pelosi, my all-time personal favorite Speaker of the House, deserves a lioness’s share of the credit as well.  Here’s a happy picture at the bill signing today.  Nancy looks pretty darn jazzed! But this blog is […]

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What's Up with the Senate?

There’s been a lot of hoopla recently about the question of whether or not Barack Obama will go to Copenhagen.  He settled that yesterday by saying that he would go if he’s needed to finalize an agreement.  This story from Reuters quotes the President:  “If I am confident that all of the countries involved are […]

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Krugman on Climate Change

Paul Krugman had a couple of columns, today and Friday, with some complementary posts at his blog, “The Conscience of a Liberal,” on the economics of cap-and-trade as well as the dire situation in which we find ourselves relative to warming and its impacts.  To refute some of the nonsensical – and false – claims […]

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Natural Gas in the Senate

I wrote recently about some solid policy analysis that would move the US off its massive dependency on coal for electricity toward a greater reliance on natural gas – until renewables fully kick into their potential.  (Limitless, not incidentally.)  A few days after my post, there was a depressing article in the “NY Times” about […]

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SPQR

SPQR

Senatus Populusque Romanus – The Senate and the People of Rome.  The old Roman Senate was, on paper, representative of the people.  Because the US is a representative democracy, the US Senate was meant, up to a certain point, to perpetuate this same principle.  It was, however, certainly less representative, from Day One, than its […]

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China’s Emissions Targets: a (Non)Reductionist Approach

The past week of events – from a U.S. Senate hearing, to remarks by China’s State Council, to high-level talks in Beijing – have scattered a layer of rich soil from which robust US-China cooperation on climate change might spring forth. However, that soil is not uniform in content. The issue of quantifiable emissions reductions, […]

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