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Take Your PickEnvironmentalists pick their sides in key Senate races14 Sep 2006
It's a rare political event that can draw applause from both the White House and environmental groups, but Lincoln Chafee's victory in the Rhode Island Republican primary on Tuesday was just that.
Lincoln Chafee.
Meanwhile, the Sierra Club and League of Conservation Voters -- the only big national green groups that endorse political candidates -- are heralding the victory of a moderate who has helped block some of the Bush administration's worst environmental policies. "The environment is and must remain a bipartisan issue," says Cathy Duvall, Sierra Club's national political director. "And it's leaders like Chafee who keep it that way." And yet Chafee is an anomaly among the 2006 Senate candidates being backed by the groups; in the rest of the cases, the enviros are rooting for Dems, who need to gain six seats to take back the majority in the Senate. (Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, who's running for reelection as an independent after losing the Democratic primary, is also getting enviro backing, but he doesn't threaten the chances of a Democratic majority.) What makes this year's Senate races particularly dramatic from the green perspective is that some of the GOP's worst environmental offenders -- Conrad Burns in Montana, Rick Santorum in Pennsylvania, and Jim Talent in Missouri -- are up for reelection and embroiled in narrow races against newcomers with ambitious green platforms. Also running for reelection is one of the Senate's strongest environmental champions, Washington's junior senator Maria Cantwell (D), whose aggressive challenger is a former insurance executive getting big support from Big Oil. One common thread connects all the races, says Duvall: "Voters and candidates alike are placing a huge emphasis on energy. High gas prices and escalating conflict in the Middle East have opened a Pandora's box of concerns around meeting energy needs safely, smartly, affordably." No wonder challengers are developing ambitious energy platforms, and incumbents backed by the fossil-fuel industry are nervous. Montana: Conrad Burns (R) vs. Jon Tester (D)It would be hard not to look green next to the Big Sky State's three-term GOP senator, Conrad Burns -- unabashed climate skeptic, advocate of human pesticide testing, beneficiary of $551,586 in campaign contributions from the oil and gas industry over the course of his career, and one of the "Dirty Dozen" members of Congress that LCV is most anxious to unseat.
Conrad Burns.
As a state senator, Tester led the fight to pass a 2005 law requiring Montana to produce at least 15 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2015 -- a victory that has already accelerated the development of wind farms in the state. Tester has also pushed hard to protect organic farms from "genetic drift" -- contamination from neighboring genetically modified crops -- and in the process faced off against Monsanto, chemical companies, and big grain growers in the state legislature.
Jon Tester.
Burns has earned a lifetime environmental voting score of 4 percent from LCV. According to the group, he has consistently voted against increasing fuel-economy standards, repeatedly sought to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling, and opposed numerous efforts to push the development of renewable energy. On the subject of global warming, the senator remarked in a recent Energy & Environment Daily interview, "[It] has been happening since the glaciers started to recede. You remember the ice age? It's been warming ever since, and there ain't anything we can do to stop it." As if that weren't enough, Burns was a leading recipient of campaign donations from disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff. A recent USA Today/Gallup Poll of likely voters found the two candidates neck-and-neck -- Tester leading with 48 percent to Burns' 45 percent, a difference within the poll's margin of error. Pennsylvania: Rick Santorum (R) vs. Robert Casey Jr. (D)Rick Santorum -- as zealous an opponent of environmental protections as he is a Bible-thumper -- is in serious danger of losing his Senate seat to state Treasurer Robert Casey Jr., in what could turn out to be one of the biggest upsets of this election season.
Rick Santorum.
Says LCV's senior vice president for political affairs, Tony Massaro, "Virtually every chance he gets, Sen. Santorum has voted for oil and gas interests and against the environment."
Robert Casey Jr.
Casey has pledged support for an ambitious 40-mile-per-gallon fuel-economy standard, and says he would back a requirement that an increasing percentage of the U.S. electricity mix come from renewable sources. Santorum, for his part, voted against including such a requirement in the 2005 energy bill. The two candidates also diverge sharply on the subject of controlling mercury emissions. This is a particularly controversial issue in Pennsylvania, home to numerous coal-fired power plants; virtually every lake, river, and stream in the state is under a fish-consumption advisory due to mercury contamination. While Santorum supported the Bush rollback of Clinton-era efforts to reduce mercury emissions, Casey supports an approach outlined by Gov. Ed Rendell (D) that would impose stricter limits on mercury emissions in Pennsylvania. The latest USA Today/Gallup poll shows Santorum trailing Casey by a whopping 18 percentage points among likely voters. Washington: Maria Cantwell (D) vs. Mike McGavick (R)
Maria Cantwell.
The first candidate endorsed by LCV and Sierra Club this election season, Cantwell has an 86 percent lifetime voting score from LCV. "She's not just a reliable environmental vote, she's been an incredibly gutsy and tireless leader on a host of issues ranging from fuel-economy standards to Superfund to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge," says Duvall. This year, Cantwell spearheaded a Democratic energy plan that proposes cutting U.S. dependence on oil imports 40 percent by 2020, slashing oil and gas subsidies, and promoting infrastructure development for biofuels.
Mike McGavick.
According to a Sept. 6 Rasmussen poll, Cantwell has a 17-point lead over McGavick, boasting 52 percent of the likely vote compared to his 35. That's a substantial jump for Cantwell since August, when she led by only six points. Missouri: Jim Talent (R) vs. Claire McCaskill (D)Missouri is another state where a pro-environment Democratic newcomer stands a decent chance of knocking out a right-wing Republican incumbent.
Jim Talent.
Claire McCaskill.
Recent polls show the two in a dead heat.
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