Office of the Independent Blogger

With a keyboard on loan from God, I welcome you to the Office of the Independent Blogger.
"Independent" in the same sense that Ken Starr was, meaning "not very independent" indeed!


Disappointments and The Disappointment

January 16th, 2007

I’m not going to update this blog obsessively with news from the Libby trial, but I will update when it’s important enough to warrant it. That certainly includes the end of the trial, Cheney’s scheduled testimony and any surprise witnesses. I have heard that the Bush Administration picked up Lionel Hutt to be Scooter Libby’s Secret Attorney. It’s like a Secret Santa, but he brings you surprise witnesses instead of coal.

Reason I bring this all up is because today was Jury Selection Day, and a few of the lucky contestants on Who Wants to Try a Millionaire? were booted out of the courtroom for saying that they despise the Bush Administration. Today is the exception, but I want to make it clear that I will not post to say, “People dismissed from jury in trial. Exciting stuff!”

Sorry to disappoint you all. Let us re-direct our disappointment to The Disappointment and The News.

The White House on Tuesday denied it was planning a U-turn on its climate change policy by embracing a system of formal caps on greenhouse emissions, despite rising pressure from European governments to change its stance. Although energy security will be a key theme in President George W. Bush’s State of the Union address next week, the White House issued an unusually public rebuttal of rumours about its climate change policy. Tony Snow, White House spokesman, said: “I want to walk you back from the whole carbon cap story…The carbon cap stuff is not accurate. It’s wrong.”

International pressure for Mr Bush to consider reducing US emissions via a form of “cap and trade” system like that in force in the European Union has intensified. The issue has been raised in the last two weeks by Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, and José Manuel Barroso, European Commission president. Tony Blair, the British premier, has also been persistent in lobbying the president. The Bush administration has consistently stressed technological solutions, rather than formal treaties such as the Kyoto accord. Mr Snow said: “What the president has talked about all along is the importance of innovation,” adding there was a need to focus on change “consistent with economic growth”.

After meeting Ms Merkel, Mr Bush said he would focus on “technological developments that will enable us to be good stewards of the environment, and enable us to become less dependent on oil and hydrocarbons from parts of the world that may not like us”. The president is also under pressure at home. Last Friday six US senators – including two presidential hopefuls for 2008, the Republican John McCain and the Democrat Barack Obama – presented a cap and trade proposal to force industries, such as electricity utilities, to cut by 2050 greenhouse gas emissions to one third of the levels of 2000.

I thought it was too good to be true. Though the fact that the President is denying it might very well be proof of truth.

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