24th
July
2007
Original source: http://www.speculativebubble.com/politics/joe-biden.php
SEN. BIDEN: I agree with everything that was said here. But the bottom line here is that eliminating the tax breaks is not going to keep jobs here in America. We’ve got to make it more attractive to have jobs here in America and for corporations to be here.
You’ve got to take the burden off the corporations with a health care system that’s universal, so we’re not at a competitive disadvantage. You’ve got to have a better education system to provide for the highest-tech jobs that we educate our folks for, so we’re not importing 400,000 computer engineers to work in Silicon Valley. And you’ve got to deal with the innovation and infrastructure needs in this country — tunnels, bridges, et cetera — which we haven’t done to make us more competitive.
posted in Candidates, Globalization, Issues, Joseph Biden (D) |
19th
July
2007
Original source: http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2007/05/14/100008849/index.htm
On globalization
“It’s not complicated. If you have capital and you’re well educated, the odds are that a global economy will benefit you. But the vast majority of Americans don’t fit in that category.”
posted in Candidates, Globalization, Issues, John Edwards (D) |
18th
July
2007
Original source: http://www.speculativebubble.com/politics/christopher-dodd.php
SEN. DODD: Yes, I disagree. I think it’s a huge issue here. The fact of the matter is we’re exporting a lot of valuable jobs in this country and we shouldn’t be doing it. I offered legislation that was passed that prohibited the Defense Department for outsourcing contracts, going off our shores here when many hard-working Americans ought to be allowed to do those jobs.
I talked earlier about providing tax incentives. When you have people literally driving to the international airports to fly to some country to provide some funding for a local project in those nations, bypassing the very communities that could very well use those kind of jobs and economic growth, that is wrong. I will continue to do what I can to see to it that we limit outsourcing American jobs.
posted in Candidates, Christopher Dodd (D), Globalization, Issues |
17th
July
2007
Original source: http://nymag.com/news/politics/powergrid/34457/
But for the current senator, much of this apparently seems dubious, at least as a road map to the future. “We just can’t keep doing what we did in the twentieth century,” she told a reporter from Bloomberg, adding that we may need “a little time-out” before the enactment of any further trade deals. Accordingly, in 2005, she voted against the Central American Free Trade Agreement. Last month, she announced her opposition to the South Korean Free Trade Agreement. She has backed legislation that would impose trade sanctions on Chinese goods unless Beijing stops holding down the value of the yuan. She has even repeatedly spouted skepticism about the wisdom of NAFTA—while stopping short of blaming her husband for its deficiencies. “NAFTA was inherited by the Clinton administration,” she informed Time magazine. “I believe in the general principles it represented, but what we have learned is that we have to drive a tougher bargain.”
posted in Candidates, Globalization, Hillary Clinton (D), Issues |
17th
July
2007
Original source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-sirota/obama-power-challenger-_b_36129.html
“People notice what’s going on overseas and they say we are not afraid to compete. But as globalization advances and corporations bottom lines know no borders and our young people are competing against children not just in California or Florida or Illinois they are competing against folks in Calcutta or Beijing.”
“At that point parents start saying why aren’t we doing everything we can to prepare our young people making them adept at math and science so that they can get the jobs of the future and be the innovators of the future? Why wouldn’t we invest in early childhood education to bring every child up to par? Why wouldn’t we start paying our teachers more and help develop training for them to recruit the best and the brightest for the classroom? Why on earth would we start increasing the cost of student loans at the precise time we know that our young people are going to be needing a college education more than ever?”
Technorati Tags: Barack+Obama, globalization
posted in Barack Obama (D), Candidates, Globalization, Issues |
9th
July
2007
Original source: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3738/is_200407/ai_n9458651
Globalization enthusiasts, including McCain and Senate Armed Services Chairman John Warner, R-Va., invert that argument, asserting that if the Navy and other service branches can’t peruse foreign markets for subsystems and componentry, they will miss out on low-cost, high-quality alternatives to American manufacturing and jeopardize critical military capabilities and readiness. They could also damage key alliances that will form the backbone of future coalitions in the war on terrorism and other potential conflicts.
Technorati Tags: McCain, globalization
posted in Candidates, Globalization, Issues, John McCain (R) |
11th
June
2007
Original source: http://2008gravel.blogspot.com/2007/03/mike-gravels-views-on-climate-change.html
Global climate change must be made an issue of national security. We must act swiftly to reduce America’s carbon footprint in the world by passing legislation that caps emissions. However, any legislation will have little impact on the global environment if we do not work together with other global polluters. Fighting global warming can only be effective if it is a collective global effort.
As President, Senator Gravel will see that the U.S. launches and leads a massive global scientific effort to end energy dependence on oil and integrate the world’s scientific community to this task. A national public works program to rewire the country towards new energy technologies would create tens of thousands of new American jobs.
posted in Candidates, Global warming, Issues, Mike Gravel (D) |
11th
June
2007
Original source: http://liberalvaluesblog.com/?p=1192
Do you want to make stopping global warming a central cause?
I don?t try to get into the middle of the science of global warming.
…..
But do you believe there?s a human role in climate change?
There may be. But whether there is or there isn?t, it doesn?t release us from the responsibility to be good stewards of the environment.
posted in Candidates, Global warming, Issues, Mike Huckabee (R) |
11th
June
2007
Original source: http://www.cfr.org/publication/13392/
Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
Sen. Biden (D-DE) has been a prominent voice calling for legislation to stop climate change. In February 2007, after the release of the IPCC report, Biden urged fellow lawmakers and President Bush to take action, saying, ?We have wasted the past six years on the sidelines of international negotiations and our leadership is needed to produce a global solution.?
Biden cosponsored the Clean Power Act of 2005, a bill which would have implemented a cap-and-trade system to reduce carbon dioxide emissions had it become law. With Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-IN), Biden has proposed two Senate resolutions on global warming. They put forward the Lugar-Biden Climate Change Resolution (PDF), passed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in May 2006. More recently, Biden and Lugar proposed Senate Resolution 30, which calls for the United States to comply with the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and to establish a ?bipartisan Senate observer group? to monitor international climate change negotiations.
posted in Candidates, Global warming, Issues, Joseph Biden (D) |
10th
June
2007
Original source: http://johnedwards.com/about/issues/energy/new-energy-economy/
The Edwards Plan:
Cap and Reduce Global Warming Pollution: Edwards will set an economy-wide limit on the emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. He will build on the precedent of the Clean Air Act of 1990 — which limited pollution causing acid rain through a sulfur dioxide cap-and-trade system — to reduce pollution in a cost-effective and flexible manner.
Use Science to Set the Caps: Edwards will cap greenhouse gases at levels that the latest climate science has determined to be necessary to avoid the worst impacts of global warming. He will cap greenhouse pollution starting in 2010, reduce it by at least 15 percent by 2020, and reduce it by 80 percent by 2050, consistent with the most aggressive plans under consideration in Washington.
Make Polluters Pay: Edwards will auction off a portion of the pollution permits to raise $10 billion a year for a New Energy Economy Fund to jumpstart clean, renewable, and efficient energy technologies and create 1 million jobs. Other permits will be sold or given away.
Lead the World toward a New Global Climate Change Treaty: Climate change is an international problem and the U.S. can never solve it alone. China is building the equivalent of one large coal-fired power plant a week and is expected to pass the U.S. as the world’s largest polluter of carbon dioxide in 2009. [NYT, 3/17/2007; WSJ, 3/3/2007]
To lead the world toward a new, effective climate change treaty, Edwards will:
Make Our Own Commitments to Restore Our Moral Leadership: The U.S. has 4 percent of the world’s population but produces a quarter of its carbon dioxide emissions. It is one of only three developed nations that has refused to limit its greenhouse gas pollution. By adopting caps, Edwards will help the U.S. regain credibility in the world without sacrificing American competitiveness. [Irish Times, 2/14/2007; Greenwire, 10/31/2006]
This is a preview of
Achieving Energy Independence & Stopping Global Warming Through A New Energy Economy
.
Click here to read the full post (420 words, estimated 1:41 mins reading time)
posted in Candidates, Global warming, Issues, John Edwards (D) |