How the country decides on Nov. 8 will have far-reaching implications for the price of electricity and gas at the pump, as well as the future of the U.S. energy industry, which employs about 10 ...
"Plausible deniability only works when it's plausible and I'm not buying that you didn't know about any of this until October 2015."
It's quickly became a symbol, a political litmus test and a line in the sand.
The measures are designed to reduce emissions that cause respiratory illness, increase cancer risk and contribute to smog and global warming while making refinery operations more efficient.
The rivers will remain closed for at least another week for irrigation and drinking water.
States have employed a host of energy-saving programs, green-purchase requirements, building efficiency standards and financial incentive arrangements to meet those goals. So how are they doing in meeting targets they have set for themselves?
"So yes, gay people have the right to marry, and poor people have the right to insurance — but on the bright side, Americans can still kill prisoners painfully, and everyone else slowly."
Federal regulators are proposing that manufacturers of medium and heavy-duty trucks reduce carbon emissions by 1 billion metric tons and cut fuel costs by about $170 billion by next decade.
Farm interests are pushing against a recently finalized federal water rule after an analysis by a trade group concluded that the rule "creates even more risk and uncertainty" for those who work the land.
The White House is upstream and without a paddle in its battle over what is 'water of the U.S.'
Obama's mentor at Harvard, Laurence Tribe, will argue on behalf of big coal which seeks to repeal the President's EPA rules to curb carbon emissions.
GOP defends big agribusiness and makes beef out of the new Dietary GuidelinesAdvisory Committee's recommendation on eating less meat.