Sunday, August 3, 2008

Backtracking with Barack — Off-shore Oil Drilling

Original Link: http://noquarterusa.net/blog/2008/08/02/backtracking-with-barack-%e2%80%94-off-shore-oil-drilling/

By Charles Lemos

On Wednesday Steve Hilton, a retired federal government worker in Lebanon, Missouri, implored Obama during a tour of a diner to consider off-shore oil production. To which, Obama replied:

“I’m in favor of solving problems. What I don’t want to do is say something because it sounds good politically.”

But with John McCain scoring points on energy and on the issue of limited domestic off-shore oil drilling and production coupled with Obama’s own sagging numbers in national polls that show the race in a statistical dead heat, Obama reversed course.


”My interest is in making sure we’ve got the kind of comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices,” Obama said in an interview with The Palm Beach Post.

”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.”

Can it be any clearer that Obama shifts with the wind-blown sands and that the only thing that matters is his own political expediency?

The before and after below the fold.

From the Palm Beach Post:

The Before: Obama risks voter ire by opposing new oil drilling

Barack Obama is once again betting that his eloquence can persuade price-weary consumers - read that as voters - to take the long view and not jump at a short-term fix when it comes to soaring energy prices.

It worked in his presidential primary contest against New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton when she proposed a “gas tax holiday” for the summer, a pitch he opposed despite its popularity with many voters. But that was in April before gasoline shot past $4 a gallon.

Virtually all polls now show dealing with energy prices high atop the agenda of voters.

At issue for Obama’s Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain, is opening up offshore drilling to boost production, a move McCain and others GOP lawmakers say would increase supply and help control soaring gasoline prices. Opponents, including Obama and many other Democrats, say new offshore oil would be years away from reaching consumers and even then would make little difference in prices and the ongoing U.S. need for foreign oil.

Republicans clearly have targeted energy prices, looking to boost their standing with consumers. President Bush has pushed Congress to permit the offshore drilling and warned that “the American people are rightly frustrated” because Democrats won’t allow a vote on opening up offshore drilling.

For his part, McCain has his sights squarely on Obama’s opposition to offshore drilling, labeling him “Dr. No when it comes to energy production.” The tactic is not surprising, because polls have shown that consumers - even in environmentally sensitive states like Florida - are desperate for politicians to do something about energy and favor offshore drilling by big margins.

Obama is pressed on the issue repeatedly on the campaign trail, but he refuses to budge, preferring to take pains to spell out his reasons.

“Please be in favor of offshore production,” Steve Hilton, a retired federal government worker in Lebanon, Mo., implored Obama during a tour of a diner there Wednesday.

“I’m in favor of solving problems,” Obama responded. “What I don’t want to do is say something because it sounds good politically.”

Obama seeks to turn the issue on its head, arguing that McCain and Bush are practicing the old politics of simply promising people something that’s symbolic without addressing the real problem. Discounting drilling, he proposes energy rebates, a crackdown on oil speculators who manipulate the market and a renewed focus on energy alternatives.

On Friday, during a campaign stop in Florida, Obama proposed a windfall profits tax to fund $1,000 emergency rebate checks for consumers besieged by high energy costs.

“Instead of offering any real plan to lower gas prices, Sen. McCain touts his support for George Bush’s plan for offshore oil drilling,” Obama said Thursday in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. “But even the Bush administration acknowledges that offshore oil drilling will have little impact on prices. It won’t lower prices today. It won’t lower prices during the next administration. In fact, we won’t see a drop of oil from this drilling for almost 10 years.”

Adding their own take on the debate are the Sierra Club and MoveOn.org, which announced Thursday that they will air ads criticizing McCain’s call for expanded oil drilling and tax proposals that would benefit oil companies. The MoveOn.org ad depicts a man speaking to the camera complaining that McCain’s proposal to lift a moratorium on energy exploration on coastal waters won’t produce oil for years. “That’s not a solution Mr. McCain, that’s a gimmick,” he says.

In fact, McCain opposes drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and during his 2000 presidential run opposed lifting the offshore drilling moratorium as well.

Although Obama makes the argument against offshore drilling much as he did against Clinton’s gas tax holiday, he faces a tougher challenge now. The disagreement with Clinton was played out in front of Democratic primary voters, many of them closely following the race and its issues.

The argument with McCain comes before a general election electorate as frustrations over gasoline prices grow at the height of the summer driving season and as the nation prepares for winter and heating costs. Polls suggest a lot of voters are pressing for politicians to do anything, even if it’s symbolic.

Voters in New Hampshire and other states hit hard by winter feel especially pinched by high fuel prices. Many homeowners enter into winter heating oil contracts during the summer.

“It’s on people’s minds,” said Fergus Cullen, state GOP chairman in New Hampshire, where the cost of heating a typical suburban home has doubled since last winter, to about $5,000. “The issues that people care about have changed dramatically since 2006 here and, not incidentally, in a way that is beneficial to Republican candidates.”

Adding to that pressure, Obama will face the full force of the GOP and the McCain campaign. To counter it, Obama cited Exxon Mobil’s record profits - the company on Thursday reported second-quarter earnings of $11.68 billion, the biggest ever by a U.S. corporation - while contending that the GOP candidate’s plan for offshore drilling won’t help consumers and “reads like an oil-company wish list.”

Obama concedes that crossing the public mood on energy prices could be risky - and he’s right. Though the public has largely turned against a war in Iraq that McCain fervently backs and Bush’s popularity is at record lows, polls show the election remains tight, with Obama clinging to a small lead.

From the New York Times:

The After: Obama shifts on offshore oil drilling

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said Friday he would be willing to support limited additional offshore oil drilling if that’s what it takes to enact a comprehensive policy to foster fuel-efficient autos and develop alternate energy sources.

Shifting from his previous opposition to expanded offshore drilling, the Illinois senator told a Florida newspaper he could get behind a compromise with Republicans and oil companies to prevent gridlock over energy.

Republican rival John McCain, who earlier dropped his opposition to offshore drilling, has been criticizing Obama on the stump and in broadcast ads for clinging to his opposition as gasoline prices topped $4 a gallon. Polls indicate these attacks have helped McCain gain ground on Obama.

”My interest is in making sure we’ve got the kind of comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices,” Obama said in an interview with The Palm Beach Post.

”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.”

In Congress, both parties have fought bitterly over energy policy for weeks, with Republicans pressing for more domestic oil drilling and Democrats railing about oil company profits. Despite hundreds of hours of House and Senate floor debate, lawmakers will leave Washington for their five-week summer hiatus this week with an empty tank.

”The Republicans and the oil companies have been really beating the drums on drilling,” Obama said in the Post interview. ”And so we don’t want gridlock. We want to get something done.”

It’s the polls that have been really beating the drums on Obama and thus the shift. It is one more example of why Obama can’t be trusted.

1 comment:

Hu San Baojia said...

B. Hussein Obama will do anything to get elected even if it means we get offshore drilling from his bargain with the Devil. He would drill in my bathroom if I vote for him. Then he will tax the gas pump so welfare mom willdrive around in a Hummer while I have a dog car. Coconuts will be cheaper than Milk because milk will go up to $15 a gallon so will have to drink coconuts. Alcohol will be dirt cheap so we can drink it with coconuts. That's maybe a positive thing, but just because McCain confessed in Vietnam it was he broke under torture when he thanked the Vietnamese People for saving his life. They just used him to win the war. McCain wouldn't do that these days. McCain doesn't play a race card either.