Scientists & Engineers for America Action Fund

More science from the Presidential candidates

McCain Clinton ObamaWe just added more information on the Presidential candidates pages in the SHARP Network. Both Clinton and Obama seem to be focusing on energy prices, while John McCain has added more information on his healthcare plan.

Barack Obama

Increasing Energy Prices

On April 25, 2008, Obama released a plan to fight raising energy prices. Details of the plan include:

  • Imposing a windfall profit penalty for oil companies selling oil at prices of over $80 per barrel.
  • Providing tax cuts for workers and families, including a “Making Work Pay” tax credit of $500 per person or $1000 per working family for 150 million workers.
  • Temporarily suspending purchases for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SRV) until prices decrease.
  • Reinstating federal supervision of the energy futures market.
  • Providing tax credits and loans for domestic auto-makers to improve the fuel-efficiency of cars built domestically.
  • Doubling fuel economy standards by 2030.
  • Lifting the 60,000-per-manufacturer cap on buyer tax credits for energy efficient vehicles.
  • Investing $150 billion over 10 years to advance clean energy technology.
  • Establishing a National Low Carbon Fuel Standard that will require fuels suppliers to reduce the lifecycle carbon of their fuels by 10% by 2020.
  • Requiring state governors and mayors to make “energy conservation” a part of their federal transportation funding plans.

Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
On April 25, 2008, Obama released a statement on the proliferation of North Korean nuclear technology to Syria:

I am deeply disturbed by the evidence of North Korea’s assistance to an illicit nuclear program in Syria. This represents a dangerous and completely unacceptable development. Unfortunately, it comes after nearly eight years of a failed policy that has been long on tough talk and short on results, as North Korea has withdrawn from the Nuclear Nonproliferation treaty, quadrupled its stockpile of plutonium, resumed testing of long range missiles, detonated a nuclear weapon, and exported nuclear technology to Syria. It’s time for aggressive diplomacy that verifiably ends North Korea’s nuclear programs and accounts for all its proliferation activities. Until we are able to confirm that North Korea is no longer in the nuclear proliferation business, the United States should not lift sanctions on Pyongyang. When I am President, we will turn the page on yet another failed Bush policy with direct and tough diplomacy as part of the multilateral talks to hold North Korea accountable.

Speeches on Science and Health Policy Issues

April 25, 2008 Remarks of Senator Barack Obama: Press Avail on Energy Plan

Hillary Clinton

Increasing Energy Prices
On April 28, 2008, the Clinton campaign released a plan to combat rising energy costs. The plan includes:

  • Enacting a windfall profits tax on oil companies and using the revenue to suspend the 18.4 cent per gallon federal gas tax and the 24.4 cent per gallon diesel tax during the summer months.
  • Closing the regulatory loophole that exempts electronic trading of energy commodities by large traders, which should decrease financial speculation on these markets.
  • Calling on the Federal Trade Commission to propose regulations to prevent the manipulation of oil markets.
  • Using the WTO to challenge OPEC’s production quotas.
  • Suspend filling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) and release some oil when necessary.
  • Raising fuel economy standards to 55 mpg by 2030.
  • Providing $1.5 billion per year in funding for public transportation.
  • Investing $150 billion in the research, development, and commercialization of renewable and alternative energy.

John McCain

Healthcare
On April 29, 2008, McCain released the details of his vision for health care during a speech at the University of South Florida. The plan specifies:

  • Allowing people to purchase insurance across state lines.
  • Giving individuals and families the option of receiving a direct refundable tax credit of $2500 or $5000, respectively, for the purchase of insurance.
  • Working with state governments to develop a “Guaranteed Access Plan,” a best practices model which would include a reasonable limit on premiums and assistance to low income Americans.
  • Using availability of information technologies to allow doctors to practice across state lines.
  • Passing tort reform legislation.

Speeches on Science and Health Issues

April 29, 2008 By John McCain On Health Care On Day Two Of The “Call To Action Tour”

Another substance and science-free debate

Gibson StephanopolousThis week’s debate between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama was perhaps the worst Presidential debate in recent history. The questions were often superficial and not a single one covered ground that has not been covered in previous election debates. Here is a short list of topics that George Stephanopolous and Charlie Gibson could have asked that would have infused some novelty. Global warming, stem cells, ethanol subsidies, science funding, innovation, competitiveness, nuclear weapons, intelligent design in schools….

The list of essential science questions that the candidates have not had to answer is awesome and the fault, this time, rests on the shoulders of ABC news who could have shown the world that they are about substance. Instead, it was as if the E! Network was running the show. Scientists and Engineers for America supports ScienceDebate 2008, but even more than SD2008, we support all candidates for elected office fully describing their positions on science-related issues. Whether there is a science debate or not this election season, there are a lot of people waiting to hear their answers. We will be releasing our plan to get congressional candidates to answer some science questions soon. In the mean time, keep updating the SHARP Network.

Candidates’ science advisors on energy and environment

environment debateThrough all the blatantly superficial presidential debates, there has yet to be a serious look at energy and the environment. However, E&ETV has footage of an event sponsored by the Society of Environmental Journalists where the the candidates’ energy and environment advisers laid out the candidates positions on a number of environmental and energy issues. The panelists include Jason Grumet, environmental adviser for Barack Obama, Todd Stern, adviser to Hillary Clinton, and James Woolsey, environmental adviser to John McCain.

It’s worth taking a listen to the advisors, but it would be far better if the canfdidates were asked these questions themselves in a science debate, which could have happened today…

Clinton announces “insourcing” initiative.

Hillary ClintonSEA just updated the SHARP Network with Senator Clinton’s new “insourcing” initiative announced on April 2nd at the “21st Century Jobs Summit” in Pittsburgh. The plan is designed to incentivize US firms to stop outsourcing jobs.

The plan includes:

  • Creating 15 innovation and research clusters across the country: the federal government will provide $500 million worth of competitive matching “cluster innovation grants” for state and local governments to stimulate their economies. The plan also includes tax exempt bonds for state and local governments to build research parks.
  • Expanding the R&D tax credit: increasing the current R&D tax credit from 20% to 30% and creating a new 40% incremental credit for “qualified investments” in basic research.
  • Catalyzing a high-tech manufacturing sector: creating a annual $500 million “Made in Green America” fund towards help manufacturers move to infrastructure to create clean energy technologies, doubling the G-MEP (Green-Manufacturing Extension Partnership), and creating a Manufacturing Advanced Research Projects Agency (MARPA).
  • Creating a $5 billion “”Insourcing” Markets Tax Credit.”
  • Closing loopholes in our tax system that make it easy for corporations to move jobs overseas.
  • SHARP Updates: Net Neutrality, STEM Education, Clinton on Healthcare

    We have three SHARP Network updates today. Thanks to everyone updating SHARP.

    Net Neutrality:
    On March 25, 2008, the United States Agricultural Department (USDA) announced a $267 million loan from USDA Rural Development to Open Range Communications to expand broadband services in 17 states to 518 rural communities. According to the USDA press release, the project should reach six million people in 447,000 households in five years.

    STEM Education:
    The most recent Trends in International Math and Science Study (TIMSS) was released by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) in 2003. According to the study, eight graders in the United States ranked fifteenth out of forty-five countries on math test scores.

    Clinton on Health Care
    In a March 2008 interview with The New York Times, Clinton talked in detail about her health care plan, including placing a cap on the amount of money a family could spend on health care at five to ten percent of income, the possibility of increasing the tobacco tax to pay for universal health care, and perhaps requiring insurance companies to spend a certain percentage of premium dollars on health care.

    Obama on science?

    Barack ObamaBarack Obama’s “plan” for science was just posted on his campaign website issues page. The statement is short and generic at best, but he has also posted a three page fact sheet that gives more detail about his overall view. They call the fact sheet a plan on the issues page, but it is really a rather odd combination of statements about his record on the issues and statements about what he supports rather than a real top down plan for science. Overall, the document is very positive for science, but it lacks enough detail for any kind of substantive assessment of what he would do for science as President. There are some notable highlights though.

    Doubling Basic Science Research Funding?: His plan plainly states that “Barack Obama supports doubling federal funding for basic research.” However, it seems that he might be talking just about the physical sciences as outlined int he American COMPETES Act. Unfortunately there is no specific mention of increasing funding for basic biomedical research anywhere in the document.

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