By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 9.18.08 @ 12:08AM
They've passed a measure that deceives the electorate and won't produce a single drop of oil.
WASHINGTON -- The other night when House Democrats appeared to
reverse their long-standing ban on offshore oil drilling, the
electorate was again hoodwinked. At least the Democratic leadership
hoped the electorate was hoodwinked.
In August Speaker Nancy Pelosi was beginning to feel the heat
from a citizenry angered by high energy prices, particularly high
gasoline prices. Republicans were clamoring for an expansion in
drilling. The voters agreed. Thus the Speaker relented and notified
endangered House Democrats with fragile election margins that they
could publicly endorse offshore drilling. Her fallback position was
that, midst the clamor for drilling, she would simply not allow a
drilling bill to come up for a vote on the House floor. Her
environmental allies would be placated. Democrats uneasily holding
on to seats in otherwise conservative districts would be placated.
And the electorate would be duped.
Unfortunately, the electorate in this time of exorbitant oil
prices is not so easily deceived. Republicans recognize expanded
drilling for oil is a powerful issue working for them in this
election year. Voters paying record high oil prices in a country
where long drives to work are often mandatory favor expanded oil
drilling. Speaker Pelosi's ruse was endangering too many of her
Democratic colleagues. Thus she resorted to Plan B. The other night
she relented and allowed a drilling bill to come to the floor for a
vote. Her Democrats favored it. Republicans generally opposed
it.
Ostensibly the bill will allow drilling as close to our shores
as 50 miles in the Atlantic and the Pacific. What is more, it will
supposedly finance development of alternative energy sources. But
through all the shenanigans Pelosi's bill will not bring us more
oil for a reason that her environmental allies perfectly well
understand. Thus in the aftermath of its passage, as marginal
Democrats breathed relief for their endangered seats, few
environmentalists were heard complaining.
They know what Pelosi knows. Further oil drilling will be
delayed in the courts for years to come. That has been ensured by
the fact that such organizations as the Sierra Club, the Center for
Biological Diversity, and something called Earthjustice (I am told
it is basically a nudist outfit with a few butterfly collectors
thrown in, possibly nude butterfly collectors) have already filed
hundreds of law suits to block further drilling.
In the past when the Democratic leadership complained that
additional offshore drilling would not produce more domestic oil,
they knew whereof they spoke. Their allies in the environmental
movement have lawsuits in place that will simply stop further
drilling.
In February 2008, the government issued 487 oil leases for
drilling in Alaska's Chukchi Sea. Environmental groups resorted to
the National Environmental Policy Act and the Endangered Species
Act to ensnarl all 487 leases in court challenges. Even once past a
court challenge environmental groups can resort to other legal and
bureaucratic roadblocks to hold off the production of oil.
The bill the other night that Democrats with a wink to
environmentalists approved and Republicans voted against needs
provisions to allow drilling to proceed now. Very simply the bill
should have included a provision that would gather up all law suits
challenging all drilling and depositing them into one legal case to
be argued before one court. Provisions have been resorted to in the
past to get on with oil production during times of emergency. In
1973, when faced with an international oil embargo, Congress simply
waived environmental laws to allow construction of the Trans-Alaska
Pipeline. Similar ingenuity can be employed today. Speaker Pelosi
has been clever in thwarting the electorate's desire for offshore
drilling -- some 70%-80% favor it. Perhaps the Republicans and a
few Democratic allies can show similar cleverness in beginning
drilling now.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi, Environment, Law, Energy, Alaska, Oil