by Jared Allen
06/10/09
It appears that
many Americans are outraged about this bill, and are calling their Congressman
and Senator Emailing them or writing them cards or letters – Consider doing
likewise. The cost of this bill and all the new laws and regulations that this
bill would bring are astronomical.
More and more
Democrats are ready to vote against Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s climate change bill,
according to a congressional committee chairman who opposes his leader.
The House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson (D-Minn.) said
Wednesday that he’s at an impasse with the lead sponsor of a climate change
bill strongly backed by Pelosi (D-Calif.), and that his list of Democratic
members who would join him in voting against the measure is growing rather than
shrinking.
“We’re stuck,” Peterson said regarding a clash he’s had with House Energy and
Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) over a number of issues in
the bill. “And there’s a lot of issues that haven’t
even come up yet.”
The two powerful chairmen are butting heads at the staff level, despite a
deadline set by Pelosi for all committee action to be completed by June 19.
But that may be the least of the trouble.
Peterson has warned that the bill put together by Waxman and Energy and
Environment subcommittee Chairman Edward Markey (D-Mass.) will fail if agriculture-related
provisions aren’t altered, and he’s said he has as many as 45 votes on his
side.That number of Democratic defections would certainly doom the prospects of
passing the bill in the House.
And while the Agriculture chairman said he’s working to resolve those
differences and not intentionally trying to torpedo the legislation, he noted
that skepticism toward the bill is growing, not shrinking.
“I’m just estimating the number of votes that will be against this,” Peterson
said. “I suspect that the list has grown as more members have gotten a chance
to look at this. I mean, my list has grown.”
Waxman, who said negotiations were still a work in progress, viewed the
situation more optimistically.
“There are a lot of things on the table and we’re moving in his direction on
certain things,” Waxman said. Like Peterson, though, Waxman declined to specify
those issues that are still dividing the two chairmen.
Trouble emerged before the Memorial Day recess when Peterson and Ways and Means
Committee Chairman Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) objected to Waxman moving the bill
only through his committee. The two chairmen insisted they have a chance to
mark up the bill, or at least see that changes were made.
Peterson threatened to have enough votes to kill the bill if he didn’t get
satisfaction, while Rangel said he wanted to focus on healthcare first, and
leave the climate change bill for a later time.
Pelosi stepped in on June 3, demanding all chairmen square their business by
June 19. But Peterson said that deadline is looking tough to meet.
“We’re not going to proceed unless we can get this stuff worked out,” Peterson
said. The two men have not yet started to negotiate face to face, Peterson
said, although he and Waxman spoke at the Wednesday chairmen’s meeting and
agreed they needed to do so.
“[Waxman] said this is something he and I probably need to talk about,”
Peterson said. “I’m available. I’m just waiting for him.”
Peterson has issues with provisions in and related to the bill, including how
the movement toward renewable energy sources will affect rural areas and the
biofuel industry.
His staff has been working with Waxman’s to reach an agreement on those and a
number of other unidentified issues. But even with the deadline approaching,
Peterson gave a pessimistic assessment of quickly reaching a deal with Waxman.
Democratic aides said they expect a number of those issues to be aired on
Thursday during an Agriculture Committee hearing on the Waxman-Markey bill.
Though not a markup of the climate change legislation, Peterson’s committee is
calling Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to testify about the
impact the Waxman-Markey bill will have on the industry and on farm states.
“It’s a chance for all of the committee members to ask questions about what
this bill will mean for their communities,” an aide said. “But I’m sure it will
identify even more of
...of the concerns that members
have.”
Forecasting yet another problem for House Democrats, Peterson said a number of
those lawmakers would be happier if the House backed away from its insistence
on such a comprehensive bill and instead starting working toward a more
pared-down effort, such as the one being put together by Senate Energy and
Natural Resources Committee Chairman Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.).
“Generally, my members probably think that what the Senate’s doing is better,”
he said. “I’ve had some of them say, ‘Why don’t we do what the Senate is
doing?’ ”
A Democratic leadership aide, though, said that House leaders have not
considered watering down their bill to get more votes.
“My impression is that we are continuing to move ahead on the compromise bill,”
the aide said.
And while the House seems stuck, momentum appears to be building in the Senate
to follow the House’s lead of enacting as big a bill as possible.
Following Majority Leader Harry Reid’s (D-Nev.) recent comments that “If [the House]
can do it, we can do it,” a group of 25 senators, led by Senate Environment and
Public Works Chairwoman Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), has been rallying around the
Waxman-Markey legislation.
That has been music to the ears of many liberals in the House, who could balk
at a bill that doesn’t include a cap-and-trade system for creating a
marketplace to control carbon emissions.
“It’s the way we make progress,” Rep. Lois Capps (D-Calif.), a member of the
Energy and Commerce Committee, said of reducing greenhouse gases through a cap
on carbon emissions. “You just can’t do one piece of this.”