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Don't Blame Dems For Dreadful Energy Bill

By David Morris, AlterNet. Posted July 13, 2005.


The energy bills now before the Senate and the House may be wrongheaded, irrelevant, costly and destructive -- but that's not the Democrats' fault.
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After two failed attempts in three years, Congress may be only weeks away from sending an energy bill to the President. Most Americans assume the bill will deal with our number one energy problem -- a growing and increasingly oppressive reliance on imported oil.

Republican leaders are doing their best to nurture that assumption. "With oil prices recently topping $60 a barrel, this legislation can come none too soon," declares Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn. Frist insists the bill will "make us less dependent on foreign sources of energy." President Bush agrees. We need a national energy bill because "we have grown more dependent on foreign sources of energy and consumers see the consequences of that at the gas pump on a daily basis."

Those who actually read the energy bills, however, will quickly realize we've been had. For the awful truth is that, even as the price of gasoline edges toward $2.50 a gallon and Congress appropriates another $82 billion for the Iraq war, the White House and Congress may enact an energy bill that does nothing to reduce our dependence on imported oil.

Much has been made of the differences between the Senate and the House versions of the energy bill. There are differences. But when it comes to oil imports, the only difference between the two is the difference between tragedy (Senate) and farce (House).

Consider just one example. The Senate, apparently having screwed its courage to the sticking point, asks the President to implement measures that will ensure that our consumption of oil INCREASES by only 4 million barrels per day by 2015, rather than the 5 million barrels per day currently projected by the Department of Energy. In other words, our dependence will worsen considerably, but not as much as it could have!

The House couldn't even bring itself to go that far. It flatly refuses to call for any reduction in our oil consumption.

How bad is it? The most effective provision in either energy bill may be a small program to promote a technology that cuts off heavy-duty truck engines after 15 minutes of idling.

Is it any wonder that the world looks at America circa 2005 and shakes its collective head?

Many commentators have severely criticized the energy bills for lavishing tens of billions of dollars on companies whose balance sheets are swollen with unprecedented profits and cash. Far less attention has been given to non-monetary sections of the energy bills, the long-term social and economic costs which may be much higher.

One such provision, for example, allows the federal government to impose high voltage transmission lines on recalcitrant states. Another severely limits the authority of state and cities over the siting of liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals. Provisions stripping states and communities of their authority over private energy companies are accompanied by another that would have the same debilitating effect on federal authority. Both bills repeal the 70-year-old Public Utilities Holding Company Act (PUHCA). PUHCA was passed to clean up the mess created by massive utility mergers in the 1920s and the resulting wave of fraud and financial manipulations that helped to bring about the Great Depression.

PUHCA forced utilities to refocus their corporate structure on their core obligation -- the delivery of low cost, reliable electricity. And it endowed the newly created Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) with the power and responsibility to examine the utilities' books and evaluate any merger proposals.

As people discover the appalling content of the energy bills, they naturally condemn both political parties. Progressives go further. They direct their most vitriolic remarks at the Democrats.

This is wrongheaded. When it comes to national energy policy there is a stark difference between the Republican and Democratic parties. We can illuminate the differences by examining votes on specific issues.

When the House voted on a provision to raise the fuel efficiency standard for new cars from the current 27.5 miles, to 35 miles per gallon by 2015, 84 percent of Republicans voted against; 70 percent of Democrats voted in favor.

When the Senate voted on whether to require 10 percent of U.S. electricity to come from renewable resources by 2020, 82 percent of Republicans voted against; 93 percent of Democrats voted in favor.

When the Senate voted on whether to call for a reduction in oil imports by 40 percent by 2025, 95 percent of Republicans voted against; 98 percent of Democrats voted in favor.

When the House voted on whether to repeal the Public Utilities Holding Company Act, 97 percent of Republicans voted in favor; 91 percent of Democrats voted against.

When the House voted on whether to preempt local and state authority over liquefied natural gas terminals, 85 percent of Republicans voted in favor; 79 percent of Democrats voted against.

The energy bills now sitting in a House-Senate Conference Committee are truly dreadful -- wrongheaded, irrelevant, costly and destructive. The White House and the majority parties in the House and Senate deserve our censure. But our anger and frustration should not lead us to paint with too broad a brush. The Democrats are not to blame for this mess.

Digg!

David Morris is co-founder and vice president of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance in Minneapolis, Minnnesota and director of its New Rules project.

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Clean the House
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jul 13, 2005 4:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is proof that we need to have sweeping changes in our energy policy. But that will only happen when the people of this country wake up from the right wing coma they've been sleeping under for the last twenty five years.

The people need to take back control of their government by voting out of office the right wing half-wits who have disgraced the halls of congress and spineless democrats who have enabled them.

But first we ought to impeach the First Fool. Whaddaya think?
Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

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Here's the problem
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jul 13, 2005 6:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Though we the people have the clout;
To vote the politicians out;
We'd still be ruled by sleazy "smarties";
Who give money to both parties;
And here's the truth without a doubt;
We can't vote those rascals out.

http://www.lincolninitiative.org

It does no good to rant and holler;
We can't outvote the mighty dollar;
The people that our votes elected;
Work for the dollars they've collected;
For citizens to take the reins;
We'll have to finance all campaigns

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"Don't Worry – Be Happy – In The Dark"
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jul 13, 2005 9:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't worry, we have the time for Bush energy policy to bear fruit: the centennial of the Great Stock Market Crash isn't for another 14 years.

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Concerned citizen
Posted by: Don on Jul 13, 2005 10:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This proposed legislation would have an immediate impact on the daily life of almost every American.

A little-publicized amendment to the House version would extend daylight-saving time by two months, having it start on the first Sunday in March and end on the last Sunday in November. Citing skyrocketing energy costs, Rep. Fred Upton, R-Michigan, and Rep. Ed Markey, D-Massachusetts, co-sponsored the measure, claiming it would save the equivalent of 10,000 barrels of oil a day.

DST may save energy during summer months when the sun rises as early 4:30 AM, standard time. But in March and November, any energy saved in the evening is lost in the morning as people turn on lights and raise thermostats while stumbling in the dark getting ready for work and school. Since the coldest part of the day is just before sunrise, the shop keeper would have to use more heating fuel in the early part of the day as well as supply more light. In today's factories, housed in windowless buildings and often operating 24 hours per day, the amount of lighting required would not
change.

According to a report on CNN, the country uses about 20 million barrels of oil a day; so 10,000 barrels a day amounts to one part per 2000, or one twentieth of one percent! Would such a minuscule energy saving justify disrupting the daily routine of millions of people, forcing everyone to rise an hour earlier in the morning and go to bed an hour earlier in the evening, and having children wait for the school bus in darkness, during March and November?

Do you believe the majority of the population really wants DST before the first day of spring, or DST at Thanksgiving? If not, I strongly urge you to immediately contact your two Senators and your Representative in the U.S. House.

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The Environment is OUR responsibility
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Jul 13, 2005 10:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Waiting for the GOV to make sound energy policy is like waiting for Christmas.You're excited about what may be,when it comes you get one thing you wanted the rest socks and underware. No, if we are going to clean up this land we have to start at the bottom.We are forced to work in mills and plants that pollute and poison all life.Most of the products for home use are highly toxic.With industry and GOV walking lockstep all over the rest of us.So we the People have to do the job.Start with Labor Unions backing environmental cleanup
of work sites.The paycut line is crap.our wages are a tax write off,so is cleaning up the mess,so they really don't loose
money they just have to wait for it like the rest of us.If your school has a power station next to it,refuse to pay book fees.
Get rid of your SUV,it's a cheap way for Detroit to sell unsafe
overpolluting deathtraps.Get the 5 yr.warrantee on your car and keep it for 4 yrs.Getting a new one every other year creates more waste and higher prices.Camp out at your local congressperson's office and demand an end to coal,the horse and buggy went,so should this.Gov only works for the People when the People make it work

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Energy Policy...From The GOP
Posted by: doneman2000 on Jul 13, 2005 1:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is mana from heaven for the few who will undoubtably rack up a few more billion right out of the average Joes pocket, all while they are deluged wiith massive tax givebacks...Thanks suckers.
P.S. just wait until we get our hands on those utilty companies. Does Enron/California mean anything to anyone other than the Californians who were Bilked for billions by good ole Enron. Can an across the country rape by these goons be very far behind? If the GOP keeps its small majority...You better believe it!!!

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So, Why Aren't Democrats On The Attack?
Posted by: thirdmg on Jul 13, 2005 2:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since Dems are in the minority in Congress, their inability to stop bad legislation might be excused to a degree. But that's not the end of the story. When Reps were in the minority, they looked for and found ways to go on the attack against Dems. At the very least, they took their grievances to the media and the public at every opportunity and raised hell. They didn't always get their way, but they did build a sympathetic following. Message to the Dems: Agitate! If you lead on these issues, the public will follow.

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