Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Obama Vetoes Pipeline....Republicans Just Getting Started

President Barack Obama gestures as he finishes speaking to members of the National Governors Association, Monday, Feb. 23, 2015, in the State Dining Room of White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
The Canadian Press - President Barack Obama gestures as he finishes speaking to members of the National Governors Association, Monday, Feb. 23, 2015, in the State Dining Room of White House in Washington.

WASHINGTON - U.S. President Barack Obama made good Tuesday on a threat to veto a bill to approve the Keystone XL pipeline, bringing the two sides in the long-running controversy to a rare point of agreement: their battle is far from over.
''The president is sadly mistaken if he thinks vetoing this bill will end this fight,'' the Republican leaders of the Senate and House of Representatives wrote in an open letter.
''Far from it. We are just getting started.''
The Canadian government echoed that theme: ''It is not a question of if this project will be approved; it is a matter of when,'' said a statement from Natural Resources Minister Greg Rickford.
''We will continue to strongly advocate for this job-creating project.''
Even the White House concurred that the issue is far from settled. It pointed out that Tuesday's announcement was a step in a long, winding process — not a final destination.
The president cast the veto as a matter of procedural principle. In his letter to Congress, Obama said the bill he was scrapping had improperly tried to usurp presidential authority.




The White House position is that cross-border pipeline permits are a matter for the president to decide — not Congress, which passed a bill earlier this month forcing the approval of the project.
That bill was delivered to the president Tuesday and he vetoed it on the very first available day.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the president could still, in theory, approve the pipeline. The veto doesn't necessarily reflect Obama's view on the pipeline itself, he noted.
''It certainly is possible,'' said Earnest said, noting the president would keep an "open mind" on the project.
"(This) does not represent a specific position on the pipeline itself... It just merely says that the benefits, and consequences, of building that pipeline should be thoroughly evaluated by experts and through this administrative process that has existed for decades.''


Activists hold a rally against approval of the Keystone XL pipeline,in front of the White House.
Activists hold a rally against approval of the Keystone XL pipeline, in front of the White House.

The administration couldn't say Tuesday when the process would wrap up. But Earnest said he expects a decision soon after the conclusion of the review by the State Department, which is leading the process.
There could also be many more twists and turns in Congress, as alluded to in the open letter Tuesday by Republican leaders Mitch McConnell and John Boehner.
Republicans will attempt to override the veto, although they don't appear to have the necessary two-thirds majority. The project only has support from a minority of Democrats.
One of those rare Democrats also hinted at future congressional efforts. There's widespread expectation that lawmakers might try attaching a pipeline provision to legislation Obama might find attractive, and difficult to veto.
''We're going to basically find a middle, if you will, and move forward,'' West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin told Fox News on Tuesday.
But the sides in this dispute can't agree on much else — not even basic poll findings.
Keystone XL supporters point to surveys consistently showing that a majority of Americans — or at least a plurality — support the project.
But environmentalists released their own poll this week suggesting most Americans don't really have a strong opinion on the issue, and would rather see Congress move on to other things




2 comments:

  1. PIC,
    You are so right , Grat minds do work alike and this is a good post .
    The pipes could burst and all that crude would soak into the ground , that's why they are so much sickness and new diseases decovered everyday .
    Grat post sweetie
    Love you PIC

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you PIC,
    We will learn just how much weight Bam's veto carries now.
    The process to extract the oil from the sands creates gases that add to global warming.
    Love you girl

    ReplyDelete

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