Colorado Politics

Editorial: Congress sends internet users to seek privacy

Congress has voted to do away with a measure meant to protect our internet privacy, and the president is expected to sign it.

Privacy regulations written by the Federal Communications Commission last year were meant to protect our web browsing histories, location information, health data, the content of our emails and other personal information, even our Social Security numbers, from being sold by our internet providers.

But a measure to scuttle the new rule passed by a 215-205 vote margin in the House Tuesday, largely along partisan sides, although Colorado’s U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman broke rank and voted against it, the only Republican among Colorado’s congressmen to do so.

Read more at The Loveland Reporter-Herald.

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Editorial: Sen. Bennet should stand up for Gorsuch

First the good news. Two Democratic senators set aside partisanship last week and announced their support for Boulder resident Neil Gorsuch to the U.S. Supreme Court. Here’s the bad news. U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., was not among them. We lament that our state’s senior senator lost the opportunity to become the first Democrat to […]

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The Boulder Daily Camera editorial: Trump can't kill clean energy

One of the more encouraging developments during the early days of the Trump administration has been the pushback from big business on the president’s attempts to repudiate climate science and encourage a return to the dirtiest of our energy sources. Jeffrey Immelt, chief executive officer of General Electric, basically told employees in a blog post […]


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