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From energy policy to health care reform, the West is where America's political future will be forged.

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The West Takes Center Stage in National Politics

By David Sirota, Creators Syndicate. Posted August 8, 2008.


From energy policy to health care reform, the West is where America's political future will be forged.
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BUTTE, Montana -- Drinking a pint in Butte, Montana's M&M bar should be an entry in a "Things to Do Before You Die" book. Sitting in this historic watering hole that has been open 24/7 for most of the last century, you get to imbibe rich spirits -- local beers and ghosts of ages past.

When I hit the M&M this week, though, the wood-paneled walls told fewer tales of copper kings like Marcus Daly and hometown heroes like Evel Knievel, and more stories of new political power. Plastered amid the ever-present St. Patrick's Day trappings were Obama for President signs -- artifacts from the senator's recent visit.

While Butte's Finlen Hotel brandishes faded photographs of John F. Kennedy's 1959 stay, major presidential candidates don't normally visit frontier mining towns. But a funny thing happened on the way to the Democratic convention in Denver: The Intermountain West -- in its understated style -- has become the most important political battleground in America.

Today, 22 Electoral College votes in the area are up for grabs, meaning this vast expanse is more pivotal than Ohio. And that's only the beginning of the Rocky Mountain region's burgeoning influence on energy, taxes, trade and health care.

For example, Senate Energy Committee Chairman Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., -- and thus the complex politics of his home state -- will have an enormous impact on petroleum and climate policy. And whatever legislation he crafts will be shaped by four congressional races along a stretch of I-25 that cuts through a tri-state oil and gas boom.

In Wyoming, Gary Trauner's campaign promoting a more diversified energy economy could make him the state's first Democratic congressman since before Dick Cheney was a representative. In Colorado, Rep. Mark Udall, D-Colo., a conservation movement hero, is competing for a Senate seat against Republican "Big Oil" Bob Schaffer, a former energy executive. And in New Mexico, Senate candidate Tom Udall and House candidate Martin Heinrich, both Democrats, are waging pro-environment campaigns against traditional drill-at-all-cost Republican opponents.

If Democrats lose these elections, the party will probably hesitate to embrace transformative energy initiatives for fear of future defeats. But should these challengers prevail, they will prove that even in fossil fuel country, candidates can win the most contested races on green platforms. That would likely prompt a more aggressive departure from the Bush administration's energy agenda.

No state, however, will play a more direct role in forging -- or derailing -- change than Montana. That's because of Democratic Sen. Max Baucus, whose position chairing the committee overseeing tax, trade and health care makes him one of the planet's most powerful people.

Baucus has long been a shill's shill, quietly pocketing campaign contributions in exchange for backing everything from President Clinton's job-killing trade policies to President Bush's billionaire tax breaks. But that corruption may collide with a populist election mandate opposing "free" trade, backing tax reform and demanding universal health care. Baucus' decision to support or inhibit such a mandate could determine its legislative prospects, meaning pressure from grassroots progressive groups like Forward Montana will be crucial.

Until now, the political Establishment has ignored the West. At best, the region has been treated as a colony to be exploited by East Coast industrialists and West Coast white flighters. More often, it is portrayed as American Siberia, with celebrity blowhards occasionally dropping in to pen patronizing stories mimicking zoological travelogues (My favorite was Time's Joe Klein telling readers that Coloradoans are "large people, as Westerners tend to be.").

Such condescension ought to begin receding as the square states become increasingly central in national politics. Indeed, for those trying to determine where America's destiny will be forged, the motto made famous by Horace Greeley is more poignant than ever: Go west, young man.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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See more stories tagged with: energy, obama, west, national politics

David Sirota is a best-selling author whose newest book, "The Uprising," was just released this month. He is a fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network -- both nonpartisan organizations. His blog is at www.credoaction.com/sirota.

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"Free" Trade Damn Sure Ain't Free...
Posted by: ranchero42 on Aug 9, 2008 9:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And "Ownership Society" means Bush's buddies want sole ownership. I've retained title to ME free and clear while the Bush money laundries stink to high heaven...

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One too many Beers at the Montana's M&M bar ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Aug 11, 2008 12:37 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sirota tries to believe that this country will be transformed by a few western states?

David you need to read Taibbi's latest article :

Big Business Is Making Sure It Wins the Presidency

David after you have sobered up and read Matt's article maybe you could write a real column.

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Understanding why people here are turning away from the Republicans
Posted by: fanny666 on Aug 11, 2008 10:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in Colorado- in the liberal oasis on Boulder, from Mark Udall's home district. I'll avoid griping about his cowardly stance toward impeachment for a second to give my perception of why the West is turning away from the Republicans.

I've always thought: most people who vote Democrat wish they could vote for the Green Party, and most people who vote Republican wish they could vote for the Libertarians.

The "conservatives" out here are (mostly) really Libertarians. There are certainly religious nutjobs in Colorado Springs, but for the most part, people vote Republican because they believe their "get the government off our backs" rhetoric. Denver voted to legalize pot!

If the Democrats want to win here they need to
1) Point out that the Republicans are the party of massive budgets, interventionist foreign policy, willfully ignoring the Constitution, and government regulation of PERSONAL behavior rather than corporate behavior. Make a Libertarian critique of the Republican party.
2) Do the opposite. Fight to restore the Bill of Rights, and make it an issue. Frame gay marriage as a freedom issue. Stop participating in the idiotic drug war. Quote the Constitution, and point out that Bush has been breaking the law pretty much constantly.

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