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Go Home Drill, Barack, Drill?

THE VINE SEPTEMBER 11, 2008

Drill, Barack, Drill?

From the Politico:

The energy debate is close to hitting a tipping point, as both
chambers are inching toward a bipartisan breakthrough that might let
Democrats steal some of the fire away from the Republican message on
oil drilling that dominated the summer break.

On Thursday afternoon, the leaders of a bipartisan Senate energy
coalition known as the "Gang of 10" announced that their numbers had
grown to 20, with Sens. Elizabeth Dole (R-N.C.), Susan Collins
(R-Maine), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) all signing
on to a bill that would encourage state-by-state decisions on offshore
drilling and authorize billions in conservation and alternative energy.

Everybody, it seems--especially the down-ballot-trodden GOP--wants to be able to spend the electoral home stretch in their states, talking up how great they are at compromising (never mind that the 110th Congress has passed fewer pieces of public legislation than like, anyone):

"America’s growing energy crisis demands immediate action," said Sens.
Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) and Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), in a joint statement.
"Our group of 20 is taking an approach that goes beyond the polarizing
partisanship that has poisoned Washington. America’s energy security is
not a Democratic issue, or a Republican issue. It is an issue that
affects all of us.” 

Hold the groaning, please. It's not perfect, but there's lots of needed funds for renewable energy development in the bill--which sends the decision to drill offshore back to the states (of which only a few have legislatures that might actually consider and approve it). Barack Obama (that craven flip-flopper) advocated this type of compromise in early August. His exact words:

"My interest is in making sure we've got the kind of comprehensive
energy policy that can bring down gas prices. If, in order to get that passed, we have to compromise in terms of
a careful, well thought-out drilling strategy that was carefully
circumscribed to avoid significant environmental damage--I don't want
to be so rigid that we can't get something done."

That's the smart play--and Obama should back this talk up instantly by joining onto the legislation and adding whichever job creating initiatives and non-ethanol-related incentives that he can give alternative energy industries. This would be a serious and timely legislative accomplishment (whither S-CHIP?) that also gives Democrats the chance to get off the mat in the slugfest that has been the summer energy debate. At the least, such a move would put a damper on the absurdish line John McCain (who withheld a crucial vote in a July bill providing tax credits for renewable energy) has been trotting out since his party's convention, about the "old, big-spending, do-nothing, me-first, country-second Washington crowd."

Right.

--Dayo Olopade

(Photo: Sign spotted in downtown Denver, Colorado, August 26, 2008.)

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6 comments

I wonder how much time they would save in the chambers if they dropped the rhetoric that emphasizes the importance in bipartisanship.  It seems liek touting bipartisanship serves as a way to get around bipartisanship when it comes time to vote, and it should be self-evident that they should get things done without partisan bias.  

Right.

- dylanposer

September 11, 2008 at 6:57pm

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Well I'm not holding my breath that this bill will actually pass but I think Obama, Biden, and Hillary should definitely get behind this more comprehensive bill at least to put the McCain's feet to the fire to either show and vote yes  or no. By doing that the Dems put the GOP ticket on display for either doing nothing to address energy issues (without grousing about Federal handouts to Big Oil and Big Nuclear) or actually voting/verbally supporting a Democratically led energy bill that will move us towards a real, foward thinking policy. This could also allow Obama to cut the ties to corn-ethanol and cut the corn pork in the bill too.

- singlespeed

September 12, 2008 at 11:39am

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I think (as do most experts not in the oil industry) the more drilling offshore is a waste of time for the incredibly small return, but this assumes the prople think rationally, which they rarely ever do in a crisis.

It may be we have to do this purely for psychological reasons, a placebo effect for the masses, but the real solution is to get off oil almost completely and develop sustainable energy resources.

Lastly, passing the buck to individual states is not the answer, if the oil is America's, and any pollution problems are America's (as there surely will be), then the decision is America's.

- MajMike

September 12, 2008 at 12:23pm

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MajMike...

Agree the big issue is getting reasonable people thinking rationally and sadly it seems that alot of folks have bought into the GOP's "Drill, Baby, Drill" placebo for high gas prices and maintaining a status quo energy policy. As we wean ourselves off oil, we need to ramp up the alternatives in a big way. IF this bill is a start on the that path I'd take that first step.

- singlespeed

September 12, 2008 at 1:18pm

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As we've been following here, the Democratic Congress has fully capitulated on the issue of offshore

- Anonymous

September 25, 2008 at 10:35pm

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As we've been following here, the Democratic Congress has fully capitulated on the issue of offshore

- Anonymous

September 26, 2008 at 10:59am

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