Moderate Republicans are Key to Stopping Proposals to open the Arctic
Refuge
to Drilling
Rep. Jeb Bradley of New Hampshire is circulating a
sign on letter urging
Chairman Pombo not to use the Budget to authorize oil
drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge. Based on the last
Budget vote, a handful of
Republicans have the leverage to prevent them from
passing a Budget. Please
ask your Republican Congressman to sign onto the
Bradley letter and help us
defeat Arctic drilling. (See copy of
letter below.)
I have called Rep. Leach's office on behalf of the Chapter. Others
are invited and encouraged to call his office too. His phone number is
202-225-6576.
Background
Proponents of opening the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge to oil development
are trying to advance the controversial
issue of Arctic drilling through the
Budget process. The Budget
Resolution which narrowly passed the House of
Representatives in April,
includes an assumption of revenues from lease sales
in the Arctic
Refuge. The Congressional leadership was surprised by the
close 211-214
vote, as all Democrats and 15 Republicans voted against the
Resolution.
11 of the 15 Republicans did so because of their objection to
the inclusion
of drilling revenues. The vote could have been even closer
had seven
Democratic allies not been absent for the vote.
But this sets up a major
showdown in late September when they try to pass
the final Budget
Reconciliation package. We are busy in DC pounding the
halls of
Congress urging members of Congress to vote against any Budget
Reconciliation
package that would authorize drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife
Refuge. We can defeat the Budget in September if the democrats
remain
united and we pick up six moderate Republicans (to cushion us against
last
minute arm-twisting off the floor). Traditionally, there are
25-30
moderate Republicans that consistently vote against drilling in the
Arctic.
Some of these members of Congress said they would be with us on a
final vote
but hid behind the notion that the Budget Resolution didn't
explicitly
mention the Arctic (though all are aware that Chairman Pombo has
said he
will use his Budget instructions to authorize
drilling).
Target List--House Moderate R Arctic Supporters who voted FOR
the Final
Budget:
Bradley (NH 1)
Ehlers (MI
3)
Frelinghuysen(NJ11)
Ferguson (NJ 7)
Smith (NJ 2)
Gilchrest (MD
1)
Kelly (NY 19)
Kennedy (MN 6)
Kirk (IL 10)
Gerlach (PA
6)
Reichert (WA 8)
Schwarz (MI 7)
Sensenbrenner (WI 5)
Petri (WI
6)
House Moderate R Arctic Supporters who voted AGAINST the Final
Budget:
Ramstad (MN 3) Castle (DE 1) Bass (NH 2) Boehlert (NY 24) Johnson (IL
15)
Shays (CT 4) Simmons (CT 2) Johnson (CT 5) Leach (IA 2) LoBiondo (NJ 2)
-
could be top priority target, last to vote Saxton (NJ
3)
MISC.
Inglis (SC 4)-peak oil, voted against Budget
Bartlett (MD
6) -peak oil, voted for Budget
Fitzpatrick (PA 8)
Walsh (NY
25)
Bradley Letter Text
version:
July 19, 2005
The Honorable Richard Pombo
Chairman
Committee on
Resources
1324 Longworth House Office Building
Washington, D.C.
20515
Dear Chairman Pombo,
We are contacting you in strong
opposition to any attempt to meet the
Resources Committee reconciliation
requirement by opening the coastal plain
of the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge (ANWR) to oil and gas drilling or
exploration.
We believe that
the reconciliation process is an inappropriate venue to be
debating this
important environmental issue. We understand the need to
reign in
mandatory spending and support the reconciliation process, however
it is our
belief that an effort to include ANWR in the reconciliation will
further
complicate an already difficult situation.
As you know ANWR represents
one of the last large pristine natural
environments left in our
country. In 1980 Congress recognized the need to
protect this national
treasure and prohibited any oil and gas drilling or
exploration on the
coastal plain. We believe that the debate on opening
this unique land
to oil and gas exploration should be done outside of the
budget process, not
as part of an omnibus bill.
Thank you for your consideration of this
important matter, and we look
forward to working with you throughout the
reconciliation
process.
Respectfully,