On Twitter, Bold Nebraska’s Kleeb put it another way:

“It has long been clear that TransCanada has no legal route through the state of Nebraska and no legal right to use eminent domain against landowners,” she added in a statement. “Now they’ve recognized that they’ve lost in Nebraska and are desperately trying another tactic to see their risky pipeline built through our state. We are happy to continue this fight in the Nebraska PSC, but we are confident that it will never come to that.”

“We know President Obama understands that this pipeline is all risk and no reward for Americans,” Kleeb added. “We call on him to do the right thing now and fully reject the permit once and for all.”

And Kleeb told the Omaha World-Herald that no matter where the fight takes place, “We have a hundred landowners who will continue to refuse to give up their land through eminent domain.”

According to the Associated Press:

In addition to trusting the commission’s authority, Tanderup added that he is “confident President Obama will reject the pipeline before the PSC even has a chance to conduct a review.”

Of course, the Keystone XL fight has implications beyond just one pipeline. As journalist Nick Cunningham wrote earlier this month at OilPrice.com, Canadian tar sands oil will be trapped without more pipeline capacity. “[W]ith the U.S. potentially closing the door on Keystone XL, the industry will have to find another way,” he wrote. “Otherwise, less oil will be flowing from Canada’s oil sands.”

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