090106: House Preparing Radical "Global Warming" Legislation
January 2, 2009
The scientific community is now debunking "Global Warming" as a serious
threat, yet Capital Hill is getting ready to proposed stifling government
regulations and restrictions to appease their "Global Warming" radical
supporters.
House Democrats are preparing the way by making some personnel changes.
The two senior House Democrats with jurisdiction over energy and
telecommunications policies could swap gavels in the 111th Congress, with
potentially dramatic implications for the shape of climate change legislation
expected next year.
Since 2007, Rick Boucher of Virginia, the Energy and Commerce Committee's
fourth-ranking Democrat, has led the Energy and Air Quality Subcommittee, which
has taken the lead role in crafting legislation to address global warming.
But Boucher said in an interview Tuesday that he expects Edward J. Markey of
Massachusetts, No. 3 among committee Democrats in seniority, to bid for the
subcommittee chairmanship. Boucher said he would "respect that decision" and
stake his own claim for chairmanship of Markey's Subcommittee on
Telecommunications and the Internet.
"I'm awaiting his decision," Boucher said. Markey has not yet made up his
mind, a spokesman said.
A move by Markey to leadership of the Energy and Air Quality Subcommittee
would represent a significant philosophical shift in the leadership of a panel
charged with writing the climate legislation that House leaders and the Obama
administration want to pass this year.
Boucher, who hails from a coal-rich corner of Virginia, worked with recently
ousted Energy and Commerce Chairman John D. Dingell, D-Mich., a champion of his
state's ailing auto industry, to produce a draft global warming bill that some
environmentalists criticized as too soft on industry.
Markey, however, is a leading liberal in his caucus and is closely aligned
with environmentalists. He also is strongly allied with House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., who named him chairman of a Select Committee on Energy
Independence and Global Warming in the 110th Congress, and with the new Energy
and Commerce Chairman Henry A. Waxman, D-Calif.
Markey introduced his own climate bill (HR 6186) in June, which would cap
greenhouse gas emissions at 85 percent below 2005 levels by 2025, a target far
more aggressive than Boucher and Dingell proposed in their draft.
Markey has long been the top Democrat on the telecommunications subcommittee
and may have some reluctance about giving up that prominent post.
But with President-elect Barack Obama signaling that a major global warming
bill will be among his top priorities this year, Markey may find the prospect of
taking a lead role in writing the legislation. His select committee has held
dozens of hearings on a wide range of climate and energy issues, but lacks any
legislative authority.
Meanwhile, Boucher would bring a strong technology background to his new job
if he ends up swapping places with Markey. A self-professed "techno-geek",
Boucher's obsession with technology has long driven his work in Congress, and he
is co-founder of the Congressional Internet Caucus. He currently serves as a
member of the technology subcommittee.
Boucher also said he would retain his membership on the Energy and Air
Quality Subcommittee even if he turns over the gavel to Markey. Boucher said he
would remain actively involved in trying to shape a more moderate climate bill.
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