Obama's Pick of Ken Salazar for Interior Suggests Nonrestrictionist Environmental Policies

December 17, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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By Michael Barone, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

The policies of Bruce Babbitt, secretary of the interior during the entire Clinton administration, were widely unpopular in large parts of the noncoastal West, including the interior parts of Washington and Oregon. The unpopularity of these policies helped George W. Bush win record-high percentages of votes in these regions and in 2000 carry every Rocky Mountain state but New Mexico (which he then carried in 2004). By 2008, memory of the Babbitt policies had faded, Democrats had added many new voters (a large percentage of them Hispanic) to the rolls, and Barack Obama carried Colorado, Nevada, and New Mexico (19 electoral votes) by comfortable margins and came within a smidgen of carrying Montana (3 electoral votes). He ran behind, but not far behind, in eastern Oregon and eastern Washington, and the Republican margins in those regions did not come close to overcoming the Democratic leads in metro Portland and metro Seattle, as they did in 2000 (18 electoral votes).

Now, it appears that Obama doesn't want to pursue Babbitt-type policies that could damage his popularity in the noncoastal West. That's my conclusion, at least, after reading this roundup of negative reactions by environmental restrictionists to the pending appointment of Sen. Ken Salazar as secretary of the interior. Babbitt, who was from metro Phoenix, favored various restrictions on land use in the West; Salazar, who comes from rural southern Colorado (and is part of a Hispanic family that has lived there for hundreds of years), has opposed at least many of them. Perhaps Salazar will be influenced by the environmental restrictionist culture of Interior Department career employees and follow a Babbitt-like course once in office. But those 40 electoral votes I just mentioned—more electoral votes than any single state but California—suggest Obama wants him to do otherwise. (Hat tip: Marc Ambinder.)

Tags:
Department of the Interior,
Obama transition,
Ken Salazar,
Obama administration,
environment,
Barack Obama

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Welcome to the brave new Green World Religion...

R.L. Schaefer of CA

Dec 17, 2008 16:51:50 PM [permalink] [report comment]

Aleksander of CA 3:41PM January 09, 2009

Salazar is easily the dumbest Senator, Colorado's wealth creating industries are resource extraction and agriculture. Salazar and Ritter, the Governor, belief tourism and taxes create Colorado's wealth. Tourism is ephermal - no wealth, no tourism. The US has had the greatest destruction of wealth over the last few months in the history of the world, actual wealth destruction, not as a percent of GDP. At this point the US is essentially bankrupt, Under Salazar/Obama more restrictions will be put on resource extraction, more land will be put off-limits, fewer jobs will be created and less wealth or no wealth will be created. Oh, yeah, he will be "moderate."

Stan Bennett of TX 10:58PM December 17, 2008

I wish you were right Michael, but with Environmentalism firmly ensconced as the State Religion with Obama and Gore as the High Priests, I reckon we can look froward to more dogmatic and intolerant regulatory policies - These policies will translate into more locked gates, closed areas, recreational restrictions, higher fees, greater expense for business and industry, higher prices for food and products, and ever decreasing access to the outdoors for families with young children, the aged, the infirm and the handicapped.

Welcome to the brave new Green World Religion...

R.L. Schaefer of CA 4:51PM December 17, 2008

Michael Barone

Michael Barone

Michael Barone is a senior writer for U.S.News & World Report and principal coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics. He has written for many publications—including the Economist and the New York Times.

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