Let me finish tonight with the president’s decision to hold off on making a decision on the Keystone Pipeline.
If you look at the map showing the route that the pipeline takes, it should look familiar. It tracks the vast swath of red territory that in every election in recent memory goes solidly Republican. That’s a grand total of between 21 and 24 electoral votes depending on the route; 62 if you count Texas.
As a setup for the Democratic ticket in 2016, Keystone looks like more of a bust than a boom.
Sure, there are Democrats elected in those states–some in the United States Senate–and there are unions who’d like to see the jobs that Keystone promises to bring. But even as a matter of 2014 strategy, and with his party facing a midterm election that could decide whether the last two years of his presidency are spent passing immigration reform and infrastructure and securing a long term legacy for himself and his party that could have generational demographic consequences or spending all his time vetoing abortion legislation and Ryan budgets, President Obama’s decision seems to be a pretty straightforward calculation.
Contrast the fewer than 50 permanent jobs the pipeline would create (far less than the 42,000 temporary jobs estimated by the State Department for a pipeline that would carry Canadian shale oil through the U.S., but not directly to American customers since it would be shipped around the world) and it’s pretty clear that the White House is right to make the calculation that that particular heaven can wait.









