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"A done deal has come spectacularly undone!" he wrote. But fellow environmentalist Matthew Tejada, executive director of the Houston Air Alliance, was more cautious. "We just got a stay of execution," Tejada said. "I don't know that we've actually fundamentally changed the mind of anyone in the Obama administration." Tejada said the pipeline wouldn't lead the U.S. toward a sustainable energy policy, but he doesn't think that played into the State Department's decision. "This is more of a political calculation to get Keystone off the books of this next election cycle," he said. TransCanada said in a statement it was disappointed in the delay but confident that the project ultimately would be approved. The company previously said a delay could cost millions of dollars and keep thousands of people from getting jobs. "If Keystone XL dies, Americans will still wake up the next morning and continue to import 10 million barrels of oil from repressive nations, without the benefit of thousands of jobs and long-term energy security," said Girling, the company's president and CEO. The American Petroleum Institute, the oil industry's chief lobbying group, said the decision put election-year politics above job creation. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, used similar language, saying Obama had sacrificed thousands of jobs "solely to appease his liberal base. It's a failure of leadership." Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, through a spokesman, said he was disappointed. He also noted the lost job opportunities and "billions in economic growth on both sides of the border," but remained hopeful the project would eventually be approved. Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman said the State Department decision was due largely to pressure from Nebraskans. Heineman called a special session of the Nebraska Legislature to address pipeline concerns, including a possible rerouting of the pipeline around the Sandhills, a region that includes a high concentration of wetlands and the Ogallala aquifer. Heineman, a Republican, called the State Department decision "an exceptional moment for Nebraskans" and a sign their voices have been heard. The decision to reroute the project comes as the State Department's inspector general has begun a review of the administration's handling of the pipeline request. That examination follows complaints from Democratic lawmakers about possible conflicts of interest in the review process. The inspector generator will look at whether the State Department and others involved in the project followed federal regulations. "I strongly believe that the more the American people learn about this project, the more they will understand that it would be disastrous for our environment and for our economy," said Sen. Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., who requested the review..
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