Thursday,  May 8, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 294 • 17 of 35

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Dakota who gave small amounts to the campaign.
• "The most contribution I've ever given to a campaign is 50 dollars, and those are the people who are attracted to the story, the people who can afford to give 10 and 20 dollars," she said. "And they don't show up on that report."

Hopes for Keystone XL vote fade as talks fail
MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

• WASHINGTON (AP) -- A bid by supporters of the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline to force a vote on the controversial project fell apart Wednesday amid partisan bickering over how the vote should be conducted.
• Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., used a parliamentary maneuver to block a bid by pipeline supporters to include the pipeline measure in an energy efficiency bill moving forward in the Senate. Republicans also were seeking an amendment to prevent the Environmental Protection Agency from imposing new greenhouse gas regulations on coal-burning power plants.
• Reid's actions came after Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell objected to Reid's offer to call an up-or-down vote on the energy bill, with a promise for a separate vote on Keystone later.
• The partisan wrangling threatened to doom prospects for both the energy efficiency bill and the pipeline measure, which would authorize immediate construction of the proposed pipeline from Canada to the United States. Supporters say the measure is needed to end years of delay by the Obama administration on whether to approve the project.
• Reid called the standoff a "shame," but said Republicans had only themselves to blame. "Senate Republicans keep changing their requests," he said.
• McConnell, R-Ky., said Reid was stifling the voice of the American people by refusing to allow amendments to the energy bill.
• "Even if Senate Democrats would rather pander to the far left and shut down debate, Republicans are going to keep fighting for the middle class," McConnell said.
• Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, called the partisan standoff ridiculous.
• "It stuns me that we have gotten into such a mess," she told reporters. "We can't even get an energy efficiency bill that everyone likes through the Senate floor."
• The Keystone XL pipeline would cross Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska, where it would connect with existing pipelines to reach refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast. The Obama administration announced last month it was delaying a decision on the pipeline's fate indefinitely.
• All 45 Senate Republicans and as many as a dozen Democrats support a bill that

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