The office of House Speaker is officially empty, and the Republican Party is in a state of chaos.
On Tuesday, Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) became the first House Speaker ever to be fired from the position. Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) brought a motion to oust him on Monday, and then he and seven other Republicans voted to ditch the California congressman a day later. The rest of the party was not happy, and in some cases visibly distraught, after the GOP left itself with no leader and no clear path forward.
On Tuesday, Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) became the first House Speaker ever to be fired from the position. Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) brought a motion to oust him on Monday, and then he and seven other Republicans voted to ditch the California congressman a day later. The rest of the party was not happy, and in some cases visibly distraught, after the GOP left itself with no leader and no clear path forward.
- 10/4/2023
- by Nikki McCann Ramirez
- Rollingstone.com
Could Congress have prevented the Bp mess? A report reveals that a law enacted after the Exxon Valdez to avoid future oil spills was deprived of cash by lawmakers.
President Obama's commission investigating the disastrous Bp oil spill quietly issued a draft report on the response last week, and within that document, largely unnoticed, emerged a damning finger pointed directly at Congress for failing to heed the lessons of the Exxon Valdez.
Related story on The Daily Beast: The Real Environmental Disaster
Specifically, in 1990, shortly after Exxon's 750,000-barrel Alaska catastrophe, Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act to funnel up to $28 million in research money annually to pre-empt and respond to possible disasters, as the oil industry "pushed the frontier of deepwater drilling." This money wouldn't come from the general coffers, but rather a trust fund, covered by a 5-cent per-barrel tax collected from the oil industry.
But over the ensuing 20 years,...
President Obama's commission investigating the disastrous Bp oil spill quietly issued a draft report on the response last week, and within that document, largely unnoticed, emerged a damning finger pointed directly at Congress for failing to heed the lessons of the Exxon Valdez.
Related story on The Daily Beast: The Real Environmental Disaster
Specifically, in 1990, shortly after Exxon's 750,000-barrel Alaska catastrophe, Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act to funnel up to $28 million in research money annually to pre-empt and respond to possible disasters, as the oil industry "pushed the frontier of deepwater drilling." This money wouldn't come from the general coffers, but rather a trust fund, covered by a 5-cent per-barrel tax collected from the oil industry.
But over the ensuing 20 years,...
- 11/30/2010
- by Rick Outzen
- The Daily Beast
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