The implications of this are rather important...
BR
 
 
 
 
 
Susan Page, USA  TODAY 6:12  a.m. EDT September 27, 2013
Senator predicts a partial government shutdown Tuesday in 'a  game of 
Russian roulette.'


 
WASHINGTON — Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, a freshman Democrat from North Dakota, is 
 ready to take on President Obama over the long-delayed approval for the 
Keystone  XL Pipeline — and she predicts her side will prevail. 
"We know that we have the votes here in the Senate; we certainly have the  
votes in the House," she told USA TODAY on Thursday. "In fact, I think we 
could  build enough votes to override a veto." 
Still, she opposes the suggestion by some pipeline supporters that the 
permit  be used as leverage in last-ditch negotiations over funding the 
government,  saying the issues should be considered separately. She predicts 
those 
budget  talks are going to fail before Tuesday's deadline, prompting a 
partial  government shutdown.
 
"My guess is it's unfortunately going to take a very dramatic act for  
people to realize that we're playing a game of Russian roulette with a very  
fragile economic recovery," she said on the weekly newsmaker video series  
Capital Download. "I think it's going to take a shutdown to achieve results."  
She is impatient on both fronts: for Congress to negotiate a so-called  
continuing resolution that is "clean," funding the government without being 
tied  to extraneous issues, and for the president to decide what to do about 
the  pipeline. 
"The Keystone Pipeline decision has taken longer than it took us to defeat  
Hitler," she said. "There's just something wrong with this process." 
Obama "got himself painted into the corner" by environmentalists who oppose 
 the pipeline, she said. "He's having a very difficult time to find a real, 
 factual, legal reason to deny the permit."
 
The pipeline, which would carry millions of gallons of crude oil from 
Canada  to Gulf Coast refineries, has been waiting for five years for the Obama 
 
administration permit required because it crosses an international border.  
Opponents argue that constructing the pipeline and extracting more oil from 
the  Alberta oil sands will cause serious environmental damage. Supporters 
say it  would create jobs and enhance energy independence. 
Heitkamp is equally caustic about regulations proposed by the Environmental 
 Protection Agency to limit emissions in new power plants, saying 
administration  policies consistently reflect "an irrational dislike of coal." 
"As the technology delivers, there's going to be an appropriate response to 
 the concerns of the American public about carbon. It's just not there 
yet," she  said. "This rule will do precious little to deal with a carbon 
problem as they  see it. It really becomes, 'We're going to burden the American 
public and the  consuming industries ... to no good environmental end.'" 
Those views put her at odds not only with the president but also with most 
of  her fellow Democrats — perhaps not surprising for a "blue" senator from 
a  solidly "red" state. North Dakota hasn't voted for a Democrat for 
president  since 1964, when 
 
Heitkamp was 9 years old. In 2012, Obama lost the state to Mitt Romney by  
an overwhelming 22 percentage points while she won in the closest Senate 
race of  the season.  
Now 57, the plain-spoken Heitkamp was the first woman to be elected to the  
Senate from North Dakota, and is now one of a record 20 women serving 
there.  Asked whether women govern or legislate differently from men, she said, 
"I will  say this: I think we measure our success on results, not whether we 
got our  picture in the paper." 
She said she is putting her faith in Senate Agriculture Chairwoman Debbie  
Stabenow, D-Mich., to figure out a way to get the farm bill approved, albeit 
not  before it expires early next week. The Senate passed a version of the 
bill but  House Republicans then slashed billions of dollars from the food 
stamp program,  setting up yet another legislative showdown.
 
"It's a metaphor for what's wrong here," Heitkamp said. She sees a 
long-term  strategy directed not only at the nutrition programs, which have 
long 
made the  farm bill appealing to members of Congress who represent cities, but 
also at the  agricultural programs that she says provide a safety net for 
farmers in the  Peace Garden State and other rural areas. 
"This is a strategy to make the farm bill less relevant to a broader  
membership," she warned, "and I fear that some of our farm-based members in the 
 
House have kind of bought the theory that this is the path  forward."

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