I think I’m just going to rerun this column from the Unheralded.Fish website from two years ago about this time of the year in every odd-numbered year from now on. Nothing seems to change. Why should I spend a bunch of time writing something new? Nobody seems to be paying any attention anyway.
JIM FUGLIE: View From The Prairie — THE ANSWER To North Dakota’s Sinister Side
Posted on
(Re-posted February 3, 2017)
Author
If I were a North Dakota Democrat, here’s what I would say to my fellow party members:
I turned on the Rachel Maddow show last night and, as usual, she had her headlights on bright, and the deer in those headlights was a young North Dakota Democratic-NPL legislator named Corey Mock. The subject was the 3 million barrel saltwater spill in North Dakota, an incident that warrants national attention and concern because it has invaded the Missouri River, threatening to reach all the way to the Father of Waters, the Mississippi, and eventually the Gulf of Mexico, in a worst case scenario.
Like most deer caught in headlights, Corey hesitated for a moment, then stammered and shuffled his way out of the road and made an escape, with little damage. But it was an opportunity missed. Rachel gave him the opening he needed, a chance to tell the story of why these things happen, more and more frequently now, and unless someone tells the story in a large, loud voice, they are going to continue to happen. They are happening because of political failure.
They are happening because Corey didn’t know THE ANSWER.
I’m going to get very political now, and a lot of you aren’t going to like it. I’m going to be critical of Democrats first because they are a big part of the problem. When I was young and strong, Democrats controlled the governor’s office and much of North Dakota state government, for many years. For 28 of 32 years, they owned the governor’s office and all the appointive offices that go with it. At times, Democrats held most of the other statewide offices, and half of the legislative seats, and for 24 years all three of the congressional offices.
But politics is cyclical in North Dakota, and the power has shifted to the Republicans, and they now run the state in what I believe is a careless and oftentimes frivolous manner (read: Tax Commissioners getting drunk before noon), and this is North Dakota’s most critical time, and I believe they are mismanaging it. When that happens, it is the responsibility of the party out of power to speak out, to call into question errors in leadership, to challenge the established thinking of the majority of voters who have elected those now in charge. To do that, they have to know THE ANSWER.
So, here’s a memo to North Dakota Democrats: It doesn’t matter what the question is, or who asks it. Here is THE ANSWER.
“North Dakota’s oil industry is regulated by a three-member commission called the North Dakota Industrial Commission. The three members, all Republicans, are the governor, the agriculture commissioner and the attorney general. The oil industry owns the first two, but the attorney general, not so much. (2017 note from Jim: I’ve changed my mind about this since the 2016 campaign campaign.) He is, though, a member of the team and generally acquiesces. The oil industry owns the governor and the agriculture commissioner by virtue of having paid for their election campaigns.” (2017 note from Jim: We’ve got a new governor now, too, and this may not be true any more because the oil industry didn’t pay for his campaign. But they did pay for the attorney general’s try for governor, and he’s still around on the Industrial Commission.)
“Ironically, the campaigns were against the same man, a cowboy-rancher named Ryan Taylor, who was defeated for governor by Jack Dalrymple in 2012 and for agriculture commissioner by Douglas Goehring in 2014. In both cases, the oil industry paid most of the Republicans’ campaign bills — more than half a million worth in 2012, something less than that in 2014 — even though Taylor was probably going to lose anyway. But the industry knew he was going to be a thorn in their side, and they wanted an insurance policy that guaranteed the two men who had kept the doors open to their greedy march across the prairie, unchecked by onerous regulations, were going to remain in office. So, they opened their fat wallets and paid for a couple of campaigns. Now, they own two of the three most important politicians in North Dakota.”
“In North Dakota, the industry is regulated only to the extent that when regulations are needed, they are drafted in the offices of the North Dakota Petroleum Council and delivered to the Capitol for implementation. The most recent example is the regulation on flaring of natural gas, which the industry wrote and presented to the Industrial Commission, saying this is how much we are willing to do to try to keep the state from getting such a bad reputation about all this gas, enough to heat all the homes in Minneapolis, being burned at the top of tall pipes sticking out of the ground every mile or so in western North Dakota.”
“The Industrial Commission, with ruffles and flourishes, adopted the rules, with the industry providing them political cover by sending in a few shills to mildly protest that they might be a bit stringent, making the politicians look like they were getting tough on industry boys who don’t like even these watered down rules. Now, of course, as the economics of the industry have tightened, a cry has already risen that the flaring rules may be too burdensome, so don’t be surprised if they’re revisited in the next couple of months.
“Pipeline spills can be prevented, but not by state officials who look the other way instead of sending in inspectors with rigorous safety standards. There were more than 2,000 spills reported in 2014, the worst year on record. We don’t know how many were not reported. There have been more than 9,000 spills reported since the department began keeping track, including what was previously the single worst on-shore pipeline leak in U.S. history (now superseded by this latest one), the largest saltwater disposal case in U.S. history, and the worst train derailment incident in U.S. history. There’s no doubt we’re making history here in North Dakota, all right.”
“That’s the record of the Republicans in North Dakota. When the industry owns the regulators, nobody gets regulated.”
That, North Dakota Democrats, is THE ANSWER.
It doesn’t matter what the question is. It’s called using your talking points, staying on message. It’s so simple, even Republicans have mastered it. It doesn’t matter what you ask John Hoeven, he’s going to talk about “good-paying jobs.” It doesn’t matter what you ask Kevin Cramer, he’s going to talk about how important our veterans are. It doesn’t matter what you ask Speaker of the House John Boehner, (2017 update from Jim: It’s Paul Ryan now, but his answer is still the same.) he’s going to bash Obamacare. It doesn’t matter what you ask Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, he’s going to tell you how important the Keystone Pipeline is. They’ve all got THE ANSWER.
Today’s Democrats need to learn from their old master, Byron Dorgan, one of North Dakota’s best politicians ever. I’m pretty sure this story is true. In his first campaign for Congress, at a town hall meeting in some small North Dakota community, a woman in the audience stood up and asked “Mr. Dorgan, are you for abortion or against it?” Dorgan’s response was “Thank you, I was hoping someone would ask about the farm bill.” And then he launched into a 10-minute detailed explanation of what he would do in Congress about farm payments, crop subsidies, land set-asides, disaster loans and everything that rural North Dakotans wanted to hear from a Congressman. Dorgan was elected that year and over and over again because he knew THE ANSWER. It didn’t matter what the question was.
Besides controlling the governor’s office for the past 22 years, Republicans occupy every single statewide office in North Dakota, four-fifths of the Legislature and have two-thirds of the congressional delegation. Until two-party government returns to North Dakota, bringing with it healthy debate and a balanced approach to growth, the industry’s going to continue to run amok, pipelines will keep bursting, flares will keep burning, trains will keep exploding, and the magnificent landscape of our precious state will be despoiled in a manner our grandparents could have never imagined. Shame on us. For not knowing THE ANSWER.
Now, Democrats, back to the beginning: Repeat after me:
“North Dakota’s oil industry is regulated by a three-member commission called the North Dakota Industrial Commission. The three members, all Republicans . . .”
2 thoughts on “JIM FUGLIE: View From The Prairie — Rerun”
Stanford Edwards February 4, 2017 at 1:54 pm
North Dakota, the corrupt petrostate on the prairie but at least it has the best state government that the oil industry can buy!
ReplyEsta Green (@redtailhawks65) March 27, 2017 at 11:35 pm
Please DO keep writing, I DO pay attention, and am bringing it to the attention of others on LinkedIn.
ReplyIf a State can be bought then so can the Federal Govt. and that’s exactly what Trump wants.
I’ve all but lost faith in our Country, and that is something I never dreamed of before. When he was elected, I wanted to LEAVE. But I’ve got a job to do and I need to keep doing it all over the Country, and that’s to bring the Native Americans HOPE that they can be brought from the bottom of the pile to a place of Honor and Respect. Yes, I’m white, that dirty word, but this is so important to me that I’ve written til my wrist is screaming at me to stop. I’m up for air at the moment, but will continue and my interested parties are waiting for a young man to put his plan into words on paper, so they can see what it’s all about. A promise of Prosperity, instead of incredible poverty, no water, no electricity. When I saw the piece about the Navajo Natives with no water allocated to them because they were not deemed important enough to bother with, it put me over the top. So, I put my money where my mouth was, at least what I could do, to help others that are without.
Like any other peoples, Natives can be undesirable, when they are swallowed up by drugs and alcohol. It is hard NOT to when there is so little hope.
So, that is MY MISSION, to bring HOPE back into their lives. There was a time in my life when that word and what it meant to me, saved MY life. It’s time to pay it forward.
A’ho.
Wild Hawk.