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View Article  Joe Biden and Bruce Lunsford

As Bruce Lunsford campaigns hard for Obama and Biden, and for Harry Reid to be Senate Majority Leader, he is campaigning to destroy Kentucky’s coal industry.

Last night, Bruce Lunsford attended an exclusive fundraiser with Joe Biden. Lunsford has given the Obama campaign the maximum contribution allowed, and Senator Biden has shipped a big check to Lunsford’s campaign.

Just this week, Biden said that, “coal kills us.” Biden also said he and Obama are opposed to clean coal and the construction of new coal plants in America.

How can Bruce Lunsford explain his support for Harry Reid and Joe Biden, given their stated, sworn opposition to Kentucky coal? Bruce Lunsford is an unabashed supporter of the Democrat ticket and its leadership in Washington, who unequivocally seek to destroy the coal industry.  That just doesn’t square with running for U.S. Senate in Kentucky.

View Article  Lunsford cheers on Obama

Bruce Lunsford gave the maximum contribution to Barack Obama in the primary.

Now he’s running an ad that could make one think he supports John McCain’s message.  Make no mistake.  Bruce Lunsford would be a solid vote for Barack Obama’s agenda in the U.S. Senate.  Watch him give the “No McCain, No Palin” cheer.

View Article  Parody

The Paducah Sun has noticed what everyone else seems to be noticing around the Commonwealth:  Bruce Lunsford can’t be taken seriously when it comes to debating the real issues in this race.

The following editorial was published today:

Sen. Mitch McConnell and Democratic challenger Bruce Lunsford held their first debate Friday in northern Kentucky. Unknown to the public, the two candidates ran into each other later in the evening in front of the slurpy machine at a mini-mart where they resumed their discussion while their drivers were outside filling their tanks. Our on-the-spot reporter was there, hiding behind the snack rack, and recorded their conversation. Following, in a Sun exclusive, is a transcript:

McConnell: Can you believe the price of gas?
 
Lunsford: I’ll tell you what I believe: I believe you Republicans and your buddies in Big Oil got us into this mess.

McConnell: Yeah, that’s what you said in the debate. But it’s just you and me talking here, Bruce. I think we can find common ground. For instance, we all know that energy prices are too high. It’s time to put party loyalties aside and work together to end our dependence on foreign oil with a comprehensive energy policy, encouraging alternative energy sources, promoting conservation and allowing new domestic exploration, including offshore drilling. Agree?

Lunsford: I agree you’re going to get drilled in the November election because you don’t care about the poor and children and the elderly and college students and farmers and workers and ...

McConnell: All right, already! We’re not on stage here. I know that many Americans are struggling. That’s why I think we need a bipartisan approach to solve the crisis on Wall Street to protect the investments and insurance and retirement accounts of ordinary people. Democrats and Republicans must work together to prevent more American businesses from suffering the fate of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers.

Lunsford: Sounds like a list of your fat-cat Republican friends.

McConnell: I’m serious, Bruce. And on foreign policy — can we at least agree that the partisan bickering must end at our borders? Rogue nations like Iran and North Korea are developing nuclear capability. We must make it clear that we won’t allow that to happen.

Lunsford: Let me make something clear: Kentucky voters won’t allow you to return to Washington.

McConnell: Well, whoever is in Congress will face some tough challenges. Take terrorism. This concerns all Americans, whether Democrat or Republican. America must not retreat in the War on Terror until Islamic extremism is defeated.

Lunsford: Yeah, well I won’t retreat until Mitch McConnell is defeated.

McConnell: Then I hope you’re ready to do what is necessary to protect the security of our shores and stand with other free nations, including Georgia and the new democracies of Eastern Europe threatened by the growing imperialistic designs of Russia. Whether you’re a Democrat or a Republican, this is in your vital interests.

Lunsford: I’m a Democrat, all right, and it is in my vital interests to ditch Mitch.
 
McConnell: Yeah, but you’re also a former businessman, so I think you would agree with Republicans on some issues. For instance, I know you recognize the need to protect American workers’ fundamental right to a secret ballot in deciding whether to unionize.

Lunsford: Here’s a secret: Nobody likes you.

McConnell: Yikes! Can’t you see that our ability to forge constructive solutions to our nation’s problems are threatened by ugly partisan attacks?

Lunsford: You’re so ugly you have to sneak up on your mirror.

McConnell: Geez, Bruce, don’t you even care about the issues? What is wrong with you?

Lunsford: Hey! Stop attacking me! I won’t be a victim of these vicious, Karl Rove tactics that you Republicans use to win elections! You’re going to regret this! I’m quoting what you just said in a campaign ad! Just wait till I tell the Courier-Journal ...

(end of tape)

 

 

View Article  McConnell Poll Shows 17% Lead

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell released a memo today from pollster Jan van Lohuizen to the McConnell campaign showing a 17% lead for the Senate Leader over Democrat nominee Bruce Lunsford. 

The survey of 900 likely voters conducted September 7th – 9th by Voter / Consumer Research shows Senator McConnell in a very strong position for reelection.  The margin of error is +/- 3.3%.  According to the survey’s findings:

-52% of those surveyed have a favorable impression of Senator McConnell while 33% have an unfavorable impression.

-Senator McConnell leads Bruce Lunsford 52% to 35%.

-Lunsford’s numbers have weakened even as he has spent heavily on negative attack ads.  Only 30% have a positive impression of him while 36% have a negative impression.

It is noteworthy that Senator McConnell has improved his position even while the political environment remains challenging.  28% feel the state is going in the right direction, while 53% feel it has gotten off on the wrong track.

View Article  New TV Ad

Senator Mitch McConnell has released a new campaign ad. From Owen Covington at the Messenger-Inquirer:

The latest campaign ad by U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell featured some faces and places familiar to Owensboro residents.
The TV ad, which began airing statewide on Saturday, touts McConnell’s efforts to find federal dollars for the H.L. Neblett Community Center in Owensboro.

In 2006, the 70-year-old home to the Neblett Center on West Fifth Street was demolished following the construction of the new center, which was built with the help of a $3 million federal appropriation secured by McConnell.

The 30-second spot features Mike Walker, who chairs the Neblett Center board and the local NAACP chapter, Josephine Rowan, a neighbor to the center, and Wesley Acton, the former Neblett Center board chairman.

View Article  Sen. McConnell on Talk Radio

Senator Mitch McConnell appeared on several talk radio shows to discuss the response to Hurricane Gustav and the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Senator McConnell with Tony Cruise

Senator McConnell with Jack Pattie

View Article  Senate Candidates to Debate

As announced yesterday, Senator McConnell has accepted the debate invitation from the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce.

Republican Kentucky U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell and Democrat Bruce Lunsford have agreed to debate Lincoln/Douglas style Sept. 13 in Northern Kentucky.

The debate will be at 8:30 a.m. at Receptions Banquet and Conference Center, 1379 Donaldson Road, Erlanger.

Under the format, Lunsford and McConnell would debate in a more open style than typical political debates, arguing issues and trading questions with one another rather than taking questions from a moderator or panelists. The style is named for the famed debates that took place during the 1858 U.S. Senate race in Illinois between Republican Abraham Lincoln and Democrat Stephen Douglas.

"We're excited they have accepted," said Steve Stevens, president of the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce, which helped organize the debate. "We think it will be a lot more interesting with the candidates asking each other questions, and then debating the answers. They can ask anything they want."

Even though the hour-long event is on a Saturday morning, organizers expect a big crowd.

"We anticipate a full house," Stevens said. "Everybody does traditional debates. I think this going to be more appealing. Plus, we really wanted to get the candidates to come to Northern Kentucky. So we're glad we could pull it off."

 

Remember the debate between Abe Lincoln and rival Stephen Douglas in 1858 in Illinois? Kentucky U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell, R, and Democrat Bruce Lunsford, will be using a similar format to debate the issues before Northern Kentucky.

Rather than answering a moderator’s questions, Lunsford and McConnell will argue issues with each other.

On Sept. 13, the two candidates will throw down at Receptions Banquet and Conference Center, 1379 Donaldson Road in Erlanger, Ky., at 8:30 a.m.

For tickets or more information, call the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce at (859) 578-8800.

View Article  McConnell Accepts Debate Invitation

The Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce is hosting a Lincoln/Douglas-style debate on Saturday, September 13th.

Senator Mitch McConnell announced today that he is accepting an invitation from the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce to participate in a Lincoln/Douglas-style debate on Saturday, September 13th.

The Northern Kentucky Chamber Government Forum will begin at 8:30 a.m. at Receptions Banquet and Conference Center at 1379 Donaldson Road in Erlanger.

For more information or to obtain tickets for the event, please contact:

Pam Allen, Vice President, Special Events
Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce
P.O. Box 17146
300 Buttermilk Pike, Suite 330
Ft. Mitchell, KY  41017-0416
Phone: (859) 578-8800
Fax: (859) 578-8802
Email:  pallen@nkychamber.com

View Article  Natural Gas IS a Fossil Fuel

Speaker Nancy Pelosi opposes off-shore drilling, and she wants to move America off fossil fuels by switching to natural gas. But there are a couple major problems with her proposal:  1) you have to drill for natural gas, and 2) natural gas IS a fossil fuel.

From the Wall Street Journal

Nancy Pelosi recently diluted her opposition to offshore drilling, but we're beginning to wonder if the House Speaker even knows why she opposed increasing domestic energy supplies in the first place.

Ms. Pelosi appeared Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," where Tom Brokaw gently pointed out that the various Democratic alternative energy ambitions are "not going to happen overnight." Replied Ms. Pelosi: "You can have a transition with natural gas. That, that is cheap, abundant and clean compared to fossil fuels." Later, she again said that "I believe in natural gas as a clean, cheap alternative to fossil fuels," and that wind, solar, biofuels and "a focus on natural gas, these are the real alternatives."

Apparently Ms. Pelosi's new script is still being reworked, but it's a telling mistake. Not only is natural gas every bit as much a "fossil fuel" as oil or coal. More to the point, these concentrated organic compounds found beneath the earth's surface must be extracted by . . . drilling. And sometimes even drilling offshore, on the Outer Continental Shelf. But more drilling is what Ms. Pelosi had refused to allow just a few days ago.

View Article  Sen. McConnell Visits Murray

Senator Mitch McConnell traveled to Murray on Friday. Senator McConnell spoke to the Murray-Calloway County Economic Development Corporation, and participated in the groundbreaking for a new industrial park. The Murray Ledger & Times wrote two articles about his visit.

 

McConnell visits Murray for EDC events

 

While some herald the high costs as a way to get people out of their vehicles and utilizing public transportation, McConnell said the fact is that for most Americans “the automobile is indispensable.”

 

The law of supply and demand is one reason, McConnell said that gas prices have sky rocketed. With countries like India and China making modern day progress, the demand for fuel has increased.

 

In 2007, 87 million barrels of oil were used daily across the world; 21 billion were used in the United States with 12 being imported and nine produced.

 

McConnell's proposed solution is to find more and use less.

 

“We need to do absolutely everything,” he said. “There is a realistic way to cut oil imports in half.”

 

Finding one-third more U.S. oil is on McConnell's agenda.

 

“We are the only country in the world that locks up so much potential supply,” he told the gathering at Murray Country Club. McConnell added that there is enough oil shale in three western states to triple the oil reserves in Saudi Arabia.

 

The second component of McConnell's proposal was to use one-third less imports. “We are not too far away from the time all of us will be plugging in our cars and trucks at night,” he said. “Battery driven cars are not that far away.”

 

One of the reasons why McConnell believes battery powered cars are in the near future is because “the delivery system of plug-in cars is already there.”

 

 

Senator talks politics, overseas issues

 

U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell covered topics overseas and a little closer to home when he visited the Murray Ledger & Times Friday.

 

McConnell, R-Ky., was in town to address the annual awards luncheon for the Murray-Calloway County Economic Development Corporation (see related story) and participate in a groundbreaking ceremony on the site of the new industrial park west of Murray-Calloway's current industrial park on U.S. 641 North.


…[He] stressed the role his length of service has played in delivering money and projects to Kentucky; two of which he has brought to Calloway County this year in the form of $2 million for the new industrial park land and $1.2 million for Murray-Calloway Transit Authority.

 

“The fundamental argument is in what way would Kentucky be better off trading in the second person in the state who's been in a position to be party leader (other was former Senator and Vice-President Alben Barkley) for a freshman senator?” McConnell asked.

View Article  WSJ: Democrats may allow a vote on off-shore drilling

From the Wall Street Journal:

It took a few months, and more than a few polls, but Democrats have concluded that they've lost the debate against more oil-and-gas drilling. The surrender became official on Saturday, when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced that even she was ready to "consider opening portions" of the Outer Continental Shelf to oil exploration.

That's great news, assuming she and her fellow Democrats really mean it. It wasn't too many days ago that the anticarbon Speaker lampooned drilling as "a hoax on the American people," while Barack Obama called it "another Washington gimmick." Now the Democratic Presidential candidate has also said he might be willing to change his mind and tolerate the exploitation of domestic energy resources.

Interestingly Bruce Lunsford and Nancy Pelosi seem to be sharing the same talking points on energy. Both Pelosi and Lunsford have called Senator McConnell’s energy plan “a hoax.”

Senator Mitch McConnell continues fighting for a vote on his energy plan, the Gas Price Reduction Act. You can encourage Congress to take action by signing the petition today.

View Article  Negative House Parties?

Many campaigns hold “house parties,” where volunteers invite friends and neighbors over in support of a candidate.

House parties are usually about SUPPORTING a candidate running for office. But for Bruce Lunsford, even the house parties are negative. In an email dispatched yesterday, Lunsford says his supporters can “help defeat Mitch McConnell by hosting a house party.”

Herald-Leader reporter Ryan Alessi wrote about this very trend in the Lunsford campaign, finding that the feeling amongst Democrats is more anti-McConnell than pro-Lunsford.

Does anyone actually support Bruce Lunsford on his own merits? Or is his campaign all about attacking the other guy?

In the meantime, we are waiting on partisan Democrats to put out those thousands of negative yard signs unveiled at Fancy Farm. Maybe they can’t find anyone to put up signs that are pro-Lunsford.

View Article  "The Audacity of Ignorance"

In making their case against expanding energy exploration offshore, Bruce Lunsford and Barack Obama frequently claim that we don’t have enough oil reserves in the U.S. to make a difference. What they don’t tell you is that we really don’t know the exact quantity of our reserves, and if Barack Obama has his way we’ll never know.  Obama has introduced a bill that would make it even more difficult to estimate offshore oil reserves.

From columnist Deroy Murdock:

Federal officials currently employ estimates based primarily on two-dimensional maps that oil-industry surveyors produced in the 1970s and furnished to the Interior Department. Since 1981, Congressional appropriations amendments effectively have barred Interior from financing or permitting survey expeditions.

…Obama's "Oil SENSE Act" would repeal the 2005 Energy Policy Act's authorization of these inventories. S.115 would leave decision makers with Carter administration maps drawn with pre-PC technology. This is like engineering a Space Shuttle mission with slide rules.

Obama's bill would prohibit expanded use of 3-D seismic techniques that locate and measure underwater oil deposits. In October 1999, President Clinton's Energy Department evaluated the environmental quality of 1970s' 2-D equipment against last decade's 3-D technology. With the latter, Energy concluded, "Overall impacts of exploration and production are reduced because fewer wells are required to develop the same amount of reserves." In 1970, 17 percent of offshore wells struck oil. By 1997, that figure was 48 percent.

Contemporary 4-D surveying adds the dimension of time. Satellites help find and quantify sub sea deposits, track their flows, and predict their next steps. Some 70 percent of 4-D wells hit oil.

Obama's Don't Ask, Don't Drill policy spurns these marvels and embraces outdated information gathered with obsolete instruments. This is the audacity of ignorance.

Adults should not make decisions in willful oblivion. Democrats like Obama prefer not to know what riches rest off America's coasts. They resemble kindergartners who cover their ears and hum loudly to muffle their parents' unwelcome words.

Meanwhile, Americans struggle to fuel planes, trains, and automobiles. Despite this national nightmare, congressional Democrats fled on a five-week summer vacation, rather than vote on Republican amendments to extend offshore drilling. Democrats chose suntan oil over oil production.

… Across the Capitol, as Human Events' Jed Babbin observed, Senate Democrats favored doubling gasoline prices to considering further fuel development. Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, of Kentucky, asked to debate pro-energy legislation. Sen. Ken Salazar, D-Colo., representing majority Democrats, objected. And if gasoline reached $5 per gallon? Salazar said no. $7.50? McConnell wondered. Salazar: Not yet. McConnell continued, "I would renew my request with the modification that the trigger be $10 a gallon at the pump." Salazar replied: "I object." …

View Article  WSJ: Environmentalists Block Alternative Energy

The Wall Street Journal published a must-read editorial about liberals and environmentalists blocking renewable energy production. It seems the party whose energy plan is to “drive small cars and wait for the wind,” doesn’t want to build the power grid necessary for wind and solar energy farms.

In this year's great energy debate, Democrats describe a future when the U.S. finally embraces the anything-but-carbon avant-garde. It turns out, however, that when wind and solar power do start to come on line, they face a familiar obstacle: environmentalists and many Democrats.

Only last week, Duke Energy and American Electric Power announced a $1 billion joint venture to build a mere 240 miles of transmission line in Indiana necessary to accommodate new wind farms. Yet the utilities don't expect to be able to complete the lines for six long years -- until 2014, at the earliest, because of the time necessary to obtain regulatory approval and rights-of-way, plus the obligatory lawsuits.

In California, hundreds turned out at the end of July to protest a connection between the solar and geothermal fields of the Imperial Valley to Los Angeles and Orange County. The environmental class is likewise lobbying state commissioners to kill a 150-mile link between San Diego and solar panels because it would entail a 20-mile jaunt through Anza-Borrego state park. "It's kind of schizophrenic behavior," Arnold Schwarzenegger said recently. "They say that we want renewable energy, but we don't want you to put it anywhere."

California has a law mandating that utilities generate 20% of their electricity from "clean-tech" by 2010. Some 24 states have adopted a "renewable portfolio standard," while Barack Obama wants to impose a national renewable mandate. But the states, with the exception of Texas, didn't make transmission lines easier to build, though it won't prevent them from penalizing the power companies that fail to meet an impossible goal.

Texas is now the wind capital of America (though wind still generates only 3% of state electricity) because it streamlined the regulatory and legal snarls that block transmission in other states. By contrast, though Pennsylvania's Democratic Governor Ed Rendell adopted wind power as a main political plank, he and Senator Bob Casey are leading a charge to repeal a 2005 law that makes transmission lines slightly easier to build.

Wind power has also become contentious in oh-so-green Oregon, once people realized that transmission lines would cut through forests. Transmissions lines from a wind project on the Nevada-Idaho border are clogged because of possible effects on the greater sage grouse. Similar melodramas are playing out in Arizona, the Dakotas, the Carolinas, Tennessee, West Virginia, northern Maine, upstate New York, and elsewhere.

In other words, the liberal push for alternatives has the look of a huge bait-and-switch. Washington responds to the climate change panic with multibillion-dollar taxpayer subsidies for supposedly clean tech. But then when those incentives start to have an effect in the real world, the same greens who favor the subsidies say build the turbines or towers somewhere else. The only energy sources they seem to like are the ones we don't have.

View Article  LUNSFORD'S NEW AD MAKES OUR POINT

Lunsford Reiterates That He Would Vote for Higher Taxes on Domestic Oil Production; Does Not Dispute That His Energy Plan Would Not Open One New Acre to Offshore Drilling

Bruce Lunsford has a new TV ad on the air in which he cites four votes Senator McConnell cast against increasing taxes on domestic oil production. As we’ve pointed out repeatedly, Bruce Lunsford supports policies like the "windfall profits tax" that would decrease domestic energy production, making the U.S. more dependent on foreign oil and driving prices even higher at the pump. Even The Washington Post and The New York Times have called Democrats’ proposed windfall profits tax a "gimmick."

Roll Call 339, 11/17/2005 – Senator McConnell opposed a windfall profits tax. Lunsford would have voted with Barack Obama and John Kerry in favor of it.

Roll call 222, 6/21/2007 – Senator McConnell voted for an amendment saying we should not increase taxes on domestic oil production unless it is certified that the tax increases would not raise prices at the pump or make us more dependent on foreign oil. Lunsford would have voted with Barack Obama and John Kerry against this commonsense measure.

Roll Call 223, 6/21/2007 – Senator McConnell opposed legislation that would increase taxes on domestic oil production. Lunsford would have voted with Barack Obama and John Kerry in favor.

Roll Call 146, 6/10/2008 – Senator McConnell opposed a windfall profits tax. Lunsford would have voted with Barack Obama and John Kerry in favor.

Lunsford’s new ad relies on misguided editorials by newspapers supportive of Lunsford’s higher energy taxes. Interestingly, nowhere in Lunsford’s ads does he 1) dispute that he bragged about creating automatic gas tax increases in Kentucky, or 2) dispute that his energy plan would not open one new acre to offshore drilling.

View Article  Sen. McConnell in Danville

WLKY covers Senator Mitch McConnell’s speech to the Danville Rotary Club. Senator McConnell discussed his energy plan and the Gas Price Reduction Act.

Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell said his energy plan would cut oil imports into the United States in half over time.

The four-term senator promoted his proposal to encourage more energy production and more conservation in a speech to the Danville Rotary Club on Friday.

Energy issues have been at the forefront of McConnell’s race against Democratic challenger Bruce Lunsford, a Louisville businessman.

Noting the November election, McConnell said Kentucky would lose considerable influence in Washington if he were replaced by someone with no seniority in the Senate.

View Article  Sen. McConnell visits Morehead

From the Morehead News:

Republican Senator Mitch McConnell was the guest speaker during the Morehead-Rowan County Chamber of Commerce luncheon last Thursday.

McConnell hit on some key issues for this year’s election. Those topics included the high gas prices and healthcare. He shared his plan for resolving the gas issue.

“The solution is to find more oil and use less. A reason for the high gas prices is there is high demand for oil,” he said. “ This caused the price per barrel to go up. Our plan will cut oil imports in half. We will be going from drilling 12 million to 6 million barrels a day.

“We need to find 3 million more barrels of oil per day. Eighty-five percent of our oil is located in the Continental Shelf and it is off limits. The reason why that reserve is forbidden is it’s considered to be an environmental issue and America is not the only country to operate this way,” McConnell said.

“Drilling on American soil would reduce the demand for oil,” he said. “The strength of the dollar depends on the price of oil. If the price of oil is high, the strength of the dollar is weakened.”

He touched on the issue of electric operated vehicles and how they can be an answer to the fuel crisis.

“Plug in cars and trucks are not in the too distant future,” McConnell said. “Soon we will be plugging in our cars and trucks in our garages because the delivery system is already in place.”

The issue of healthcare was brought up during a question and answer segment of the meeting. The question that was presented: What was to be done about the overwhelming healthcare problem? McConnell spoke of Great Britain and how their healthcare is free but their plan has its flaws.

“We have 40 million people who are uninsured. It is not to say that everyone is not cared for,” he said. “ Many are cared for and cannot pay the bill. That bill does not go unpaid because it falls to the rest of us. We can all agree that is not good.

“The question is how do we get them covered? We need to tackle the problem of the uninsured,” he said. “I know if you ask any physician or hospital administrator, that the cost of litigating is being passed to us.”

View Article  Editorial: "Multi-millionaire Bruce is disguised as a regular Joe"

From today's Paducah Sun:

If Bruce Lunsford were to arrive at his next cocktail party with bib overalls over his tuxedo it would be no stranger than his attempts to portray himself as a populist in his campaign for the U.S. Senate.

When the Democratic challenger to Sen. Mitch McConnell called the Senate minority leader “Multi-millionaire Mitch” at the Fancy Farm picnic, it must have made even his most ardent supporters wince. The fabulously wealthy Lunsford is the Democratic nominee only because he is self funded — the national party would not invest limited resources in such a long-shot race — and the only other self-funded candidate in the crowded primary was profoundly unqualified.

Lunsford is blasting American oil companies, an easy target with gas near $4 a gallon. Taking a cue from Barack Obama, he supports a windfall profits tax — which he defines as “unexpected profits” — on oil companies. But acknowledging that those profits are unexpected does not prevent him from implying that the high prices at the pump are the result of collusion on the part of Big Oil — with, naturally, the complicity of Mitch McConnell.

Big Oil does not set oil prices, but oil companies do indeed benefit when prices go up. That, Lunsford believes, is unacceptable. He thinks Congress should decide when an American company makes too much money and confiscate profits it considers excessive.

What does Lunsford intend to do about the foreign governments — two-thirds of our oil is imported — who are also enjoying “windfall” profits from American oil consumption? Answer: Give them a competitive advantage by making it more costly for American companies to reinvest profits in exploration and refining.

And that’s only the half of it. The candidate wants to make it doubly difficult for Big Oil to increase domestic production. His eight-point plan for energy independence does not include drilling at ANWR and along the Outer Continental Shelf, where vast oil reserves are known to exist. Yet the plan does include coercing oil companies to drill on land and offshore sites currently leased for drilling but where oil companies have determined no significant quantities of recoverable oil exist. He states, “ ... these areas are undeveloped because drilling there would not yield high enough profits to maintain oil companies’ record earnings.”

Pause to catch your breath, dear reader; a statement so stupid surely took your breath away. Lunsford, who clearly knows better after his successful business career, would force oil companies to make manifestly unsound business decisions.

Lunsford calls McConnell unfair for placing part of the blame for high gas prices on Lunsford himself, then defends his role in doing just that. As a member of the Gov. John Y. Brown administration, Lunsford lobbied for automatic increases in the state fuel tax. The most recent increase, pushing the state gasoline tax to just over 21 cents per gallon, was quietly added to the price at the pump this summer.

Lunsford boasted, “We changed the way we tax gas in the state to give us a budget that could grow.”

That’s the justification — ensuring a budget that can grow? We’ll take comfort contemplating that fact next time we fill up.

Ironically, Lunsford’s plan calls for a holiday from the federal gas tax, which stands at 18 cents a gallon. Apparently 18 cents is too much tax, but 21 cents is not.

The true comprehensive plan for energy independence is the one McConnell champions day after day in the Senate chamber. It includes, like Lunsford’s plan, clean-coal technology, lifting the ban on developing vast shale oil deposits and alternative/renewable forms of energy. But unlike Lunsford, McConnell also calls for increasing nuclear power, the cleanest, most economical source of energy. And he calls for lifting the ban on offshore drilling and tapping ANWR’s vast reserves of recoverable oil.

Unfortunately, Majority Leader Harry Reid thwarts every serious attempt to decrease American dependence on foreign oil. Increasing domestic supply is anathema to Democrats in Congress, who are under the thumb of the environmental lobby.

Multi-millionaire Bruce is disguised as a regular Joe. He’s apparently intimidated by Kentucky’s two largest newspapers, with their reliably liberal editorial pages, hoping they won’t pick on him for being rich as long as he rails against others in his tax bracket. It’s an unbecoming role for Lunsford.

View Article  "Do Both"

Senator Mitch McConnell is fighting to pass the Gas Price Reduction Act. The Act would help solve America’s energy crisis by applying the principle, “find more, use less.” Senator McConnell’s bill opens the door to increased domestic energy exploration, and supports efforts to increase energy conservation.

Washington Democrats oppose these common-sense efforts to both increase energy production and decrease consumption. Senator McConnell is leading the call to do both, find more and use less.

From columnist Charles Krauthammer (emphasis added):

Democrats have the advantage on just about every domestic issue from health care to education. However, Americans' greatest concern is the economy, and their greatest economic concern is energy (by a significant margin: 37 percent to 21 percent for inflation). Yet Democrats have gratuitously forfeited the issue of increased drilling for domestic oil and gas. By an overwhelming margin of 2 to 1, Americans want to lift the moratorium preventing drilling on the Outer Continental Shelf, thus unlocking vast energy resources shut down for the past 27 years.

Democrats have been adamantly opposed. They say that we cannot drill our way out of the oil crisis. Of course not. But it is equally obvious that we cannot solar or wind or biomass our way out. Does this mean that because any one measure cannot solve a problem, it needs to be rejected?

Barack Obama remains opposed to new offshore drilling (although he now says he would accept a highly restricted version as part of a comprehensive package). Just last week, he claimed that if only Americans would inflate their tires properly and get regular tuneups, "we could save all the oil that they're talking about getting off drilling."

This is bizarre. By any reasonable calculation of annual tire-inflation and tuneup savings, the Outer Continental Shelf holds nearly a hundred times as much oil. As for oil shale, also under federal moratorium, after a thousand years of driving with Obama-inflated tires and Obama-tuned engines, we would still have saved an amount equal to only one-fifth the oil shale available in the United States.

But forget the math. Why is this issue either/or? Who's against properly inflated tires? Let's start a national campaign, Cuban-style, with giant venceremos posters lining the highways. ("Inflate your tires. Victory or death!") Why must there be a choice between encouraging conservation and increasing supply? The logical answer is obvious: Do both.


The problem for the Democrats is that the argument for "do everything" is not rocket science. It is common sense. Which is why House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, surveying the political rubble resulting from her insistence on not even permitting drilling to come to a floor vote, has quietly told her members that they can save their skins and vote for drilling when the pre-election Congress convenes next month. Pelosi says she wants to save the planet. Apparently saving her speakership comes first.

View Article  Sen. McConnell Discusses Energy with Owensboro Chamber

Senator Mitch McConnell traveled to Owensboro on Thursday for the Chamber of Commerce’s Rooster Breakfast. Read this report on the event from the Messenger-Inquirer.

Discussion of energy -- producing more and using less -- dominated U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell's speech to the Greater Owensboro Chamber of Commerce's Rooster Booster breakfast Thursday morning.

That message could have been taken straight from the results of a poll conducted Wednesday by the national polling firm Rasmussen Reports that showed 81 percent of likely voters believe there is an urgent need to find new energy and 67 percent see the same urgency in reducing consumption.

"The solution is to find more and to use less," McConnell told the crowd at the RiverPark Center. "There is no one way to get on top of this problem."

McConnell, who is facing re-election this year, took the opportunity to make a pitch for his return to Washington next January by reminding residents how much money he has secured for the state.

He cited a recent magazine article that showed that U.S. Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania was the most effective freshman lawmaker in delivering dollars to his home state with $16 million in the last year.

By comparison, McConnell said he brought in $500 million for Kentucky in the last year, which he said speaks to the clout he has been able to garner while in office.

"There would be a massive loss of influence and clout were you to trade me in for a freshman Democrat," McConnell said.


As has been the case with many Republican lawmakers since Congress adjourned last Friday for a five-week recess, McConnell hammered Democratic leaders over the proposal in the U.S. House to expand offshore oil drilling that has not been taken to a vote.
McConnell estimated that expanding oil production through more drilling and conversion of oil shale could increase domestic supplies by 3 million barrels a day and conservation measures would eventually decrease demand by 4 million barrels a day.

Those two fronts would have an impact on the 21 million barrels of oil currently being consumed in the United States, 12 million of which come from outside the country, McConnell said.

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