On this Earth Day all our thoughts are supposed to be directed at saving the planet. Some think we can do this by passing cap-and-trade legislation designed to reduce carbon emissions, but as I point out in passing in my Examiner column today, with the Obama administration leaving the task of writing legislation to Congress, such legislation is highly unlikely to pass, for the very good reason that it will impose sharply higher increases in electricity rates for half the country than for the other. It’s going to be hard to get members of Congress from the first half to vote for it.
In the meantime, with the Obama administration pressing General Motors bondholders to take 15 cents on the
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But here’s a heartening note, on another issue—and something I missed in the coverage of Barack Obama’s appearance at the Summit of the America’s. According to Investor’s Business Daily, Obama promised Colombia’s President Alvaro Uribe that he would seek ratification of the Colombia Free Trade Agreement. This should have been a no-brainer all along: Colombia currently imposes tariffs on some U.S. products, while the United States under the Caribbean Basin Initaitive lets in Colombian products duty-free. But U.S. labor unions have been waging all-out war against the Colombia FTA and persuaded Speaker Nancy Pelosi last spring to violate the Trade Promotion Authority and refuse to bring it to the floor of the House. Well, if we can’t save the earth, at least we may be able to help save Colombia, the third largest country in Latin America.
