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Saturday, November 21, 2009

LEGISLATURE & POLITICS

Vitter: Global warming bill will fall short in Senate vote

U.S. Sen. David Vitter, R-La., told employees at ExxonMobil on Friday that he thinks a House-passed global warming bill will face problems in the U.S. Senate and needs to be defeated. Among those listening are, from left, ExxonMobil Baton Rouge Chemical Plant Site Manager Dan Schuessler and Exxon Mobil Global Networking Advisor Richard Mohring. At right is Steve Blume, ExxonMobil Baton Rouge Refinery manager.
Show Caption TRAVIS SPRADLING/THE ADVOCATE
  • By WILL SENTELL
  • Advocate Capitol News Bureau
  • Published: Jul 18, 2009 - Page: 8A

U.S. Sen. David Vitter denounced a U.S. House-passed global warming bill Friday and predicted it will fail in the Senate.

“I don’t think there is anything salvageable in this bill,” said Vitter, R-La.

The Republican spoke to about 180 ExxonMobil Chemical Co. employees and fielded several questions, mostly on energy policies.

Vitter spent most of his time blasting “cap and trade” legislation that won narrow House approval last month with heavy backing from President Barack Obama.

Backers said the measure would offer the first enforceable limits on global warming pollution and create millions of clean energy jobs.

The legislation is supposed to reduce the heat-trapping gases building up in the atmosphere and gradually move America to cleaner sources of energy.

Vitter said the proposal would ignite a huge energy tax increase — $846 billion by one estimate — and damage Louisiana’s economy.

He said the measure also stems from a false premise on how much humans contribute to global warming.

“I don’t think it is clear and settled, the extent of the human impact on temperature trends,” Vitter said afterward.

The bill includes mandatory reduction of emissions that would raise the cost of energy from coal, oil and natural gas. Other provisions are designed to protect consumers.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said the bill would cost the average household $175 a year in 2020. Others dispute that estimate.

Vitter said the bill faces opposition from most of the Senate’s 40 GOP members and some of the chamber’s 60 Democrats. Bills in the Senate need 60 votes to get around opponents and fatal delaying tactics.

“It will really come down to getting 60 votes in the Senate,” he said.


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