|
Democrats Delay Senate Vote on Energy Bill (Washington DC)
Politics: The move hurts the Bush plan's chances and gives rivals
time to draft an alternative.
source: Elizabeth
Shogren & Richard Simon LA TIMES 2001.11.28
WASHINGTON -- Senate Democratic leaders announced Tuesday that
they will postpone action on new energy legislation until next year,
delivering a major blow
to one of President Bush's top domestic initiatives.
Their decision diminishes the prospects for several provisions
of Bush's plan, including opening Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge to oil companies and
providing the oil, coal, gas and nuclear industries with about $30
billion in tax breaks and subsidies.
At the same time, it extends the issue into an election year, giving
Democrats less incentive to reach a compromise and more incentive
to use the debate to highlight
differences between Democratic and Republican approaches to energy
policy. Senate Democrats are pushing for a bill that, unlike Bush's,
tilts more toward
conservation than energy production, does not permit drilling in
the Arctic refuge and calls for higher miles-per-gallon standards
for sport-utility vehicles.
In August, the House passed an energy bill that closely resembled
Bush's vision; reconciling the House and Senate plans may now prove
difficult.
GOP lawmakers were furious Tuesday about the delay, contending
that energy policy is an issue of national security made more imperative
by the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks and the recent rise in tensions between the United States
and Iraq. "Next year is not soon enough for energy," argued
Sen. Frank H. Murkowski (R-Alaska), perhaps the Senate's most dogged
advocate for drilling in the Alaskan refuge. Citing Bush's criticism
this week of Iraq for its refusal to admit weapon inspectors, Murkowski
said: "If Baghdad is our next target after Kandahar, what's
going to happen to that oil?"
Doug Hattaway, spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle
(D-S.D.), countered that "the Republican energy proposal has
nothing to do with national
security." "Everyone knows we won't get a drop of oil
out of Alaska for 10 years and it won't last more than a few days,"
he added.
Sen. Larry E. Craig (R-Idaho) said he would ask Bush to become
more involved in pressing Congress to act quickly on the bill. Environmentalists,
industry
representatives and Republican political analysts all remarked that
Daschle appears to be calling the shots on energy policy. "You're
seeing Daschle line up the political plays he wants to make next
spring and summer to set his party up for the midterm elections,"
said Scott Reed, a GOP strategist. "Bush's challenge is to
continue to be engaged with domestic issues, starting with the economy,
and secondary issues, like an energy policy, to show that he can
govern."
But prospects for the president's energy plan are eroding because
California's energy crisis, fresh in lawmakers' minds when the House
adopted its bill, has passed,
and a nationwide energy crisis never materialized. "Barring
another crisis, it's going to be very difficult for the administration
to revive the issue and overcome the environmental obstacles,"
said Marshall Wittmann, a political scholar at the conservative
Hudson Institute. Short of a crisis, pushing for hefty federal funding
and tax breaks for energy companies looks to people "like the
administration is just helping out their wealthy supporters,"
said Wittmann. "It's an ironic moment where the Republicans'
political agenda is losing steam as their leader is in the stratosphere."
he added.
At this point, time clearly appears to be on the Democrats' side.
Supporters of the Bush plan hoped that the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
the president's popularity, and instability in the Persian Gulf,
particularly the increased tensions between the United States and
oil-producing Iraq, would all work to their favor. But Daschle's
maneuvering after the terrorist attacks prevented a debate on the
matter when emotions were at their highest, and efforts by Republicans
to force votes on the House energy bill during debates on unrelated
issues were voted down handily.
Early last month, Daschle took the energy legislation from the
Senate Energy Committee, which looked likely to include a provision
to allow drilling in the Alaskan
wildlife reserve, and declared that he would manage the drafting
himself. This has given him the flexibility to develop a package
that Democrats can gather around. "It gave Daschle time to
put together his legislation and build a consensus around the package,
which the Democrats didn't have before," said Alden Meyer,
an
energy specialist at the Union of Concerned Scientists.
The Daschle plan, which has not yet been unveiled, will focus on
achieving energy security by reducing demand rather than increasing
drilling. For example, it is
expected to set a requirement that a certain percentage of the country's
electricity be generated by renewable energy sources, such as wind
and solar power, and
include tax incentives for consumers to purchase hybrid automobiles,
which use much less gasoline. The Daschle plan is also expected
to include provisions, which are not included in the Bush plan,
to try to restrict the nation's swelling emissions of carbon dioxide
and other products that contribute to global warming.
The House has also approved another piece of Bush's energy agenda,
extending a law that limits to $9.5 billion the amount of damages
that the nuclear power
industry must pay in the event of an accident.
|