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Shareholders Tell Oil Companies To Save Arctic
This spring, shareholders at two of
the world’s largest oil companies,
ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco,
voted to push their companies to
stay out of the Arctic Refuge and
recognize the risk from drilling in
other environmentally sensitive
areas.
The resolutions, organized and
filed by a PIRG-led coalition that
includes the Sierra Club and Green
Century Capital Management,
were supported by more than 9
percent of ChevronTexaco shareholders
and more than 8 percent of
ExxonMobil shareholders.
State PIRGs Gear Up To Save Refuge
The fight over the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge intensified in the Congress this summer and into the fall. WISPIRG is working harder than ever to secure the votes needed to preserve the Refuge.
According to WISPIRG Arctic Campaign Director Athan Manuel: “The pro-drilling lobby has been forced to bundle Arctic drilling into the budget instead of airing it for an up-or-down vote, primarily because they know it would fail.”
But even under the pro-drilling lobby’s new strategy, the budget
barely passed Congress this spring—by just three votes in the House, and four in the Senate.
WISPIRG is focused on persuading
a handful of moderate senators and representatives to vote to protect
the Arctic. We’ve met with the senators, spoken with citizens and collected thousands of public comments
in favor of preserving the Refuge. Our traveling oil derricks and report releases made headlines wherever they went, and got the word out about the Refuge.
WISPIRG’s Fears On Campaign Finance Law Prove True
“The Role of Hard Money”—a new report by WISPIRG federal Democracy
Advocates Gary Kalman and Adam Lioz—takes a critical look at the impact of the McCain-Feingold Reform Act of 2002. After the first full election cycle, WISPIRG found that candidates and political parties raised more money than ever before, topping $2.5 billion;
big money still determined the outcome of 97 percent of races; and competition for seats dropped even further as fewer candidates than ever chose to run for Congress.
The law, initially supported by WISPIRG, was crippled in an 11th hour compromise that traded a ban on unregulated “soft” money for doubling the limits on regulated “hard” money contributions.
Voicing strong opposition to the compromise, WISPIRG explained how higher contribution limits would undermine the long-sought goals of reform—and these predictions
have now come to fruition.
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| ADVOCATING DRUG SAFETY—Lindsey Johnson, consumer advocate for WISPIRG, called on Congress to pass more sensible drug safety laws. While on the market, Vioxx is estimated to have caused over 140,000 cases of heart disease in the U.S.—and 40 percent of those cases resulted in death. |
WISPIRG Backs Drug-Safety Bill
Despite years of warnings from its own drug reviewers, the FDA took no significant action to protect consumers from Vioxx. The Vioxx scandal and other problems have led WISPIRG federal Consumer Advocate Lindsey Johnson to lobby Congress to reform the FDA. Introduced
by Sens. Grassley (Iowa) and Dodd (Conn.), the Food and Drug Administration Safety Act would give the FDA the authority it needs to protect consumers from dangerous
drugs and inform doctors of new drug safety concerns.
Experts estimate that in less than five years on the market, Vioxx caused more than 140,000 cases of heart disease in the U.S. Up to 40 percent of those led to death. |