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A US bid to ease gas prices
But the president and Congress can do little in the short term to help consumers.
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"It is not the consumers' fault," said Sen. Richard Durbin (D) of Illinois, the deputy Democratic leader. "It is the fault of leadership: the leadership of the oil companies and the fault of an administration that comes from the oil patch and is afraid to confront their old friends when it comes to these rising prices at the gas tank."
In fact, rallying behind a common energy policy is a tough call for either party. In the past, energy debates on Capitol Hill have been shaped by regional, rather than partisan, lines. While some Democrats call for responding to the crisis by opening up new sources of production at home, Sen. Bill Nelson (D) of Florida vows to filibuster any attempt to open oil and gas exploration off the west coast of Florida.
"It's the most likely prospect we have for increasing supply in the next few years," says Sen. Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico, ranking Democrat on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and a cosponsor of the bill. Democrats are also divided over whether to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling.
"It's going to be very difficult for the Republican Party to try to convince folks that this energy problem is the result of anything that Democrats have or have not done, particularly when oil profits are announced next week," says Bill Wicker, the Democratic spokesman for the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
Since 1990, oil and gas interests have contributed $140.9 million to GOP federal candidates and $46.7 million to Democrats, according to the Center for Responsive Politics in Washington. In the 2006 electoral cycle, those industries have given 84 percent to Republicans and 16 percent to Democrats, according to the Washington-based public-interest group.
Some consumer groups blame the current price run-up on the refiners. They maintain that consolidations have reduced the amount of gasoline available to Americans. "They have failed to expand capacity to discipline price," says Mark Cooper of the Consumer Federation of America.
He says any study of price gouging by the government is already too late. "They will look for collusion, but collusion is not the problem. It is how concentrated the industry has become."
However, Mr. Slaughter maintains that the mergers have kept some refineries open that would have otherwise closed. "It's not clear some of the small refiners would have survived on their own," he says. "The consolidation has made the industry more competitive and added refining capacity had the mergers not occurred."
President Bush Tuesday outlined how he intends to ease high fuel prices. His short-term strategy includes the following three prongs:
• Relief for consumers. Mr. Bush said the Federal Trade Commission, the Justice Department, and the Energy Department are investigating whether gasoline prices have been unfairly manipulated. The administration has urged all 50 state attorneys general to investigate possible illegal price manipulation. Bush also called on Congress to take back some of the tax breaks for energy companies.
• Incentives for fuel-efficient vehicles. Bush urged Congress to expand tax credits for people who buy hybrid and clean-diesel vehicles.
• More domestic supplies. Bush halted government purchases of crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve until fall, ostensibly freeing that supply for consumers. He also allowed the temporary suspension of clean-air rules requiring certain additives in gasoline that reduce pollution. The rule suspension makes it easier for refiners to meet demand, possibly lowering prices at the pump.
- Associated Press
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