2009-04-26 Home Front: Politix
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To get votes, Waxman offers cap-and-trade breaks
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In exchange for votes to pass a controversial global warming package, Democratic leaders are offering some lawmakers generous emission "allowances" to protect their districts from the economic pain of pollution restrictions.
Rep. Gene Green, D-Texas, represents a district with several oil refineries, a huge source of greenhouse gas emissions. He also serves on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which must approve the global warming plan backed by President Barack Obama.
Green says Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who heads the panel, is trying to entice him into voting for the bill by giving some refineries favorable treatment in the administration's "cap and trade" system, which is expected to generate hundreds of billions of dollars over the coming years. Under the plan, companies would pay for the right to emit carbon dioxide, but Green and other lawmakers are angling to get a free pass for refineries in their districts.
"We've been talking," Green said, referring to a meeting he had with Waxman on Tuesday night. "To put together a bill that passes, they have to get our votes, and I'm not going to vote for a bill without refinery allowances."
Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, the top Republican on the energy panel, said Waxman and others are also dangling allowances for steel and coal-fired power plants to give political cover to Democrats whose districts rely on these companies.
Democrats so far have been unable to get enough support from their own members to pass the bill out of a small global warming subcommittee because most Republicans and many Democrats say the plan will raise energy rates, destroy jobs and increase prices on manufactured goods.
Republicans said Waxman and subcommittee chairman Ed Markey, D-Mass., are calling Democrats into their offices and offering allowances, also called credits, in exchange for votes.
Waxman told The Examiner he was not trading votes for allowances.
"That is what the Republicans are saying, but that is not accurate," he said. The bill left out specifics on allowances "in order to be able to have discussions on how best to ease the transition for various geographical regions and ratepayers."
"I will politely disagree," said energy committee member John Shimkus, R-Ill., who insisted Waxman "is calling members into his office to try to get their vote, and that will be based on the credits they are offering."
While Shimkus acknowledged that closed-door negotiating was "just a way of doing business" in Congress, he said offering emission allowances for votes may take the process beyond ethical boundaries.
"We are talking real dollars here, real shareholder wealth," Shimkus said, "and we are not being given the time to analyze these credits."
Environmentalists and free-market advocates say the credits will favor struggling, out-of-date operations.
"We are going to have electricity that is dirtier because the allowances are going to be misallocated," said Robert Michaels, an economics professor at California State University and senior fellow for the Institute for Energy Research.
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Posted by Fred 2009-04-26 10:04||
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Posted by JohnQC 2009-04-26 13:56||
2009-04-26 13:56||
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