This story first appeared in the E&E Daily on November 13, 2005.
1. ANWR
Republican troubles undermine House drilling
proposal
Ben Geman, Greenwire
reporter
House leaders will try again this week to pass
budget legislation that does not include Arctic National Wildlife Refuge oil
drilling -- a bill that must advance to keep alive prospects of opening the
Arctic refuge through a House-Senate budget reconciliation conference report.
As drilling supporters look to conference negotiations with the Senate
to salvage the measure, analysts say the Republican Party's woes and GOP
moderates' focus on the 2006 elections are key factors behind House leaders'
decision last week to jettison ANWR from their budget package. The same
factors could complicate efforts to bring it back.
The revolt of
Republican moderates forced House leaders to ditch ANWR -- and even then, they
could not find enough support for the $51 billion spending cut package and
abandoned a floor vote last week. Leadership staff are hoping to tweak the
spending cut measure enough to secure passage and hope to return it to the
floor.
But moderates are publicly vowing to continue making ANWR a
defining issue. And experts say low GOP approval ratings and the House
leadership's weakened position in the wake of former Majority Leader Tom
DeLay's (R-Texas) indictment have changed the dynamic of the House.
"There is no doubt that the broader political environment, in
particular the decline of the president and Republican Party fortunes, have
emboldened some moderates on Capitol Hill to act on some of their beliefs,"
said Thomas Mann, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Both
sides are dug in
Over two dozen moderates pressed House leaders to
jettison ANWR and a provision allowing new offshore drilling. With Democrats
united against GOP spending cuts, it would only take 14 of these members
refusing to vote for any package that includes ANWR to prevent its passage
through the House. The struggle marks a surprising reversal of fortune for
drilling backers after years in which the Senate was the main battle ground.
The revolt has not been quiet. Last week, Republicans working through
the Republican Main Street Partnership called a press conference to highlight
their refusal to go along with ANWR drilling and pledged to hold firm. "We
plan to project that position forward to the final conference committee
report," said Rep. Charles Bass (R-N.H.), a leader of anti-drilling moderates,
at a press conference Thursday.
"One of the questions obviously is the
fact that the conferees will probably all support drilling in the ANWR, what
reason is there not to pop it right back in and send it right back to the
House," he said. But if ANWR does reappear, he warned, "there will be no
reconciliation ... and they need to understand that. I and other like-minded
members will not vote for the final package when it comes back if it has
drilling in the Arctic."
The moderates' tough stance creates problems
for the leadership, because a substantial number of other Republican lawmakers
are strongly in favor of ANWR development. There were indications last week
that some members would consider voting against reconciliation without ANWR
included. However, voting down the House package would effectively end any
hopes of ANWR moving this year.
On Thursday afternoon, Brian Kennedy,
an aide to House Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo (R-Calif.), said
the House member is "adamant that it be in a final conference report, and he
has quite a bit of company."
Midterm anxieties
Analysts say GOP
moderates are weighing their positions on reconciliation with an eye on the
midterm races. "In this current political climate, it is going to be very
tough to ask moderates to take tough votes that they are going to have to
answer for in the 2006 elections," said Amy Walter, senior editor at the
Cook Political Report, an independent, nonpartisan newsletter.
The revolt on ANWR has been led largely by Northeastern Republicans.
"They get what 2006 could mean for them," Walter said. "In a difficult
political climate, theirs are the kind of districts that are the most
vulnerable. They are the incumbents who more than any others need to find ways
to show their independence in the midterm election, and ANWR is one way to do
that."
And environmentalists have pledged to make it a defining issue.
The League of Conservation Voters has promised to hold members who support a
budget package with ANWR "accountable" in upcoming elections.
Drilling
opponents are not assuming the battle is over, given the possible reappearance
of ANWR drilling in conference if the process gets that far. "I think we would
never want to underestimate the lengths to which this Republican leadership
will go to try to get the votes for a measure, regardless of how unpopular or
discredited," said David Moulton, chief of staff for Rep. Edward Markey
(D-Mass.), a leading opponent of ANWR development.
Senate leaders who
included ANWR in their $35 billion reconciliation package are expected to push
hard for its inclusion -- they gained a slim pro-drilling majority in the 2004
elections. But they lack the 60 votes needed to break a filibuster, so
including ANWR in budget bills immune from the tactic is seen as the only path
to energy development there.
"You never want to underestimate [Sen.]
Ted Stevens [R-Alaska]. He is never going to give up and say, 'That's how the
ball bounces,'" said Jim DiPeso, policy director for Republicans for
Environmental Protection, which opposes ANWR drilling.
But he and
others are cautiously optimistic that House leaders may be unable to craft a
measure that appeals to both their party's moderates -- who oppose both ANWR
and some cuts to social programs now in the measure -- and conservatives who
insist upon more aggressive mandatory spending cuts and energy production
measures.
"It is like a chemistry experiment," DiPeso said. "You have
to have just the right amount of ingredients or the whole thing will explode,
and right now it is looking like it is getting ready to explode."
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