[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 82 (Wednesday, June 8, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3575-S3576]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ENERGY POLICY
Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, yesterday and the day before, I came
to the floor and noted the many troubling signs of a persistently weak
economy and how I believe the actions of Democrats here in Washington
are seriously undermining the recovery Americans desperately want. I
proposed some things that could be done about it right now.
The President says he wakes up every morning asking himself what he
can do to create jobs and help businesses succeed. Let me offer a few
suggestions. It is not that difficult, really. I am sure the job
creators and the workers the President meets with are telling him the
same thing they tell all of us every day. Most people think Washington
is too intrusive, that it imposes too many job-stifling regulations and
sends too many mixed signals today for anybody to plan for tomorrow. We
know that many who would hire right now are actually holding back
because they do not know what else to expect in terms of regulations,
in terms of taxes, in terms of mandates, and in terms of fees. In fact,
we just learned that a significant percentage of businesses plan to
drop their employee health coverage--something the administration
assured us repeatedly people did not have to fear. Unexpected jolts
such as these are causing confusion and anxiety, and they are freezing
job creators and entrepreneurs in place.
Beyond that, many Americans are also seriously concerned about a
government in Washington that spends trillions more than it takes in
and a national debt that this year will exceed our entire national
economy. Many people are also understandably outraged by the fact that
the party that occupies the White House and runs the Senate has not
even taken the time to put together a budget or any other kind of plan
to get our Nation's fiscal house in order. After all, if the government
does not plan ahead, how can job creators? If the White House does not
have a plan to pay down the debt or preserve entitlements, why should
people have any confidence that something will be done?
None of this is news to the President or to the Democrats in
Congress. The fact is, the President and Democrats in Congress know as
well as I do what employers and workers need to prosper and to create
prosperity and jobs. They just don't seem to want to do it, and that is
the problem. To be blunt, people wonder whether the President is really
focused on jobs when so many of his policies seem to be aimed at
destroying them and where there is so much he can do right now to
create tens of thousands of good American jobs.
Yesterday, I spoke about trade and how, even though the President
admits that pending trade agreements with South Korea, Panama, and
Colombia have the potential to create tens of thousands of new jobs and
boost American businesses, he refuses to move on them in an apparent
favor to his union allies.
This morning, I would like to focus on the two sides of the
President's energy policy in which he publicly claims to support
greater domestic production and the jobs that come with it even as he
seems to do everything he can behind the scenes to block production and
to kill energy-related jobs right here at home.
The President says he is a proponent of domestic energy production,
but, let's be honest, he has not shown it. This should not surprise
anyone. This is an administration, after all, that appointed an Energy
Secretary who, a month after the President's election, said, ``Somehow
we need to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to the levels
in Europe.'' Since then, the administration's policies have helped us
get there. Not only have gas prices skyrocketed, but the
administration's policies are also hindering the creation of thousands
of good private sector jobs that so many Americans desperately need.
Let's look at just a couple.
Everyone knows that in the aftermath of the oilspill in the gulf last
year, the President imposed a 6-month moratorium on new deepwater
drilling. We can dispute the wisdom of a temporary ban for purposes of
a safety and
[[Page S3576]]
environmental review. What we cannot dispute is that the impact on jobs
and the Nation's economy has been quite severe, nor can we deny that
the White House has effectively continued the ban even after its time
was up and the review was complete. It was only after the courts got
involved and months of political pressure from both Democrats and
Republicans that the administration reluctantly began issuing new
permits months after the ban was supposedly lifted. And even as gas
prices hover around $4 a gallon, permitting is still well below
prespill levels and energy production in the gulf is expected to slow.
Senator Vitter tells us that the administration's anemic permitting
in the gulf for domestic energy production threatens nearly 100,000
jobs every year in addition to the many thousands of jobs that could be
lost every year in industries that are related to or are dependent on
energy. Senator Vitter has also told us about one estimate suggesting
that 23 wells per month are needed just to maintain current production
levels in the shallow waters of the gulf and that even after the
moratorium was supposedly lifted, the administration has averaged fewer
than 2 per month.
As for deepwater drilling, the administration has issued a grand
total of two new deepwater permits--just two. The other 13 have been
for work that was already permitted prior to the moratorium.
The administration's lack of support for energy production in deep
water has led to five rigs simply pulling up stakes over the past year
and moving their tax dollars and their workers elsewhere in the world.
This is just one of the ways the administration is holding back job
creation in the energy industry. This is to say nothing of the
administration's actions with respect to Alaska's Outer Continental
Shelf, which, according to one estimate, could create an average of
54,700 new jobs annually for decades, adding billions in pay and tax
revenue.
Let's not forget that the administration's impact would be even worse
if it had its way and raised taxes on energy producers, which would
have only served to strengthen foreign competitors, raise gas prices
even more, put energy independence further out of reach, and kill more
American jobs. By one estimate, the energy tax Democrats still want to
impose on energy producers could cost 154,000 jobs and $68 billion in
lost wages.
For 2\1/2\ years, Democrats in Washington have paid lipservice to the
idea of job creation even as they have pursued an agenda that is
radically opposed to it. We can see this when it comes to trade, as I
indicated yesterday, and we can see it when it comes to energy, as I
have discussed this morning. Unless Democrats change their priorities
and their policies, the threats of a downgrade will not go away. The
debt will not get any smaller and businesses will not create the kinds
of jobs Americans need. The President can talk all he wants about the
economy, but it is time he starts looking at the impact of his own
policies on the economy.
We need to change course, and a good place to start is with trade and
with energy. American businesses want to expand and want to hire. Here
are two areas where we can help them do it right now.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Nebraska.
Mr. JOHANNS. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for 15
minutes.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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