iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Big Oil: Ending Tax Breaks Would Be 'Un-American,' Raise Gas Prices

Oil Tax Breaks

First Posted: 05/12/2011 8:05 am Updated: 07/12/2011 5:12 am

WASHINGTON (Timothy Gardner and Deborah Charles) - The world's biggest oil companies on Wednesday launched broadsides against Democratic plans to pare back some of their cherished U.S. tax breaks, saying the measure was "un-American" and would only push up already high gasoline prices.

Top executives from the five biggest oil companies will testify about the tax breaks on Thursday before the Senate Finance Committee. A day before the hearing companies and lawmakers traded barbs over the effort that Democrats say could help cut the deficit by about $21 billion over a decade.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has said he hopes a bill repealing the tax breaks will be voted on in the full chamber next week.

Eliminating the tax breaks has been a goal of President Barack Obama and the call by lawmakers has become louder with stubbornly high fuel prices ahead of next year's elections. The effort will face opposition by Republicans and some Democrats who fear it could send gasoline prices higher. But with $4 a gallon gasoline, it could also be an awkward time for many politicians to appear to be supporting oil companies.

Senators who sponsored the bill said the companies needed to do their part to cut the deficit and they could afford to give up the tax breaks.

"We're here to say 'enough already' to Big Oil. You're doing fine enough on your own," said Senator Charles Schumer, standing at a Washington gas station where prices started at about $4.30 a gallon (3.78 liters).

"Right now people are paying as much for gas as they're paying for healthcare and groceries," said Senator Debbie Stabenow. "Now's the time to take away subsidies."

But Republicans said it would act as a tax that the oil companies would pass onto consumers by pushing up fuel prices.

"JOB DISCRIMINATION" AND "UN-AMERICAN"

Rex Tillerson, the chief executive of Exxon Mobil one of the five companies to appear before the Senate panel, will say at Thursday's hearing that the tax breaks are not special incentives for oil companies, but standard deductions applied across many businesses, including corn farmers, movie producers and coffee roasters.

"Frankly, to then deny a select few companies within the oil and gas industry this standard deduction is tantamount to job discrimination," Tillerson will say, according to a copy of his oral testimony obtained by Reuters.

ConocoPhillips, one of the five oil companies that will testify called the tax proposals "un-American" in a release, angering the bill's main sponsor, Senator Robert Menendez, who demanded the company apologize at Thursday's hearing.

Conoco said the proposal unfairly singles out the five biggest oil companies for additional taxes and would cost jobs and shrink government revenue.

Oil companies, on the defensive after raking in huge profits in their first quarter, also said consumers would pay more if they lose their drilling incentives.

"At a time when everyone is concerned over the cost of gasoline, Congress shouldn't do anything that could actually worsen the situation," said Jim Mulva, the ConocoPhillips chief executive.

Exxon wants Congress to pass Republican bills in the House to open offshore drilling, which they say has been held back by Obama administration rules after last year's BP oil spill.

The Republican-led House passed a bill on Wednesday requiring the Interior Department to act within 60 days on permits requested by oil and gas companies to drill on offshore federal tracts. It is one of three bills the Republicans say would boost domestic energy and government revenues. But the measures face stiff opposition in the Senate.

Several of the oil companies said they already pay more taxes than many other industries. But the Citizens for Tax Justice, an advocacy group, says consumers and workers pay some of the taxes, not the oil companies.

In addition to Tillerson and Mulva, Shell Oil Co U.S. President Marvin Odum, BP America Chairman Lamar McKay, and Chevron Chief Executive Officer John Watson will testify.

Reid and Menendez sent Republicans a letter urging them to support the legislation.

"If we are to truly address our national debt, we will all have to tighten our belts and make sacrifices -- even the most wealthy and powerful among us," the letter said.

(Additional reporting by Tom Doggett; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BUSINESS

WASHINGTON (Timothy Gardner and Deborah Charles) - The world's biggest oil companies on Wednesday launched broadsides against Democratic plans to pare back some of their cherished U.S. tax breaks,...
WASHINGTON (Timothy Gardner and Deborah Charles) - The world's biggest oil companies on Wednesday launched broadsides against Democratic plans to pare back some of their cherished U.S. tax breaks,...
Filed by Maxwell Strachan  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 632
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (20 total)
08:35 AM on 05/16/2011
If big oil thinks it is un-American to take away their entitlements or their welfare, then so be it. I really don't give a you know what!
photo
isb782
JM is the Man!
01:50 AM on 05/16/2011
Let me understand this with a straight face if I can hold myself from laughing that it is unamerican to take away big oli's tax break but it is not unamerican to ask the poor middle class to pay more at the pump....huh.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Bogstomper2
Secular conservative
01:38 AM on 05/16/2011
I think we should do more than end subsidies for big oil. We should end the corporation. To my conservative mind, the reasoning is clear. Conservatism says that people should be responsible for their actions. A corporation is a business/legal tool that allows the people who reap the most benefits to avoid virtually all responsibility for their actions.

Power without responsibility is a perfect recipe for unethical behavior. My conservative compadres used to know this.

So let's end the experiment with the corporate model. That model is just a regulatory creation anyway; it's not an inherent part of the free market. That model encourages immoral behavior. That model has led to the death of American citizens and the destruction of American property. That model has to go.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Bogstomper2
Secular conservative
01:23 AM on 05/16/2011
Has there been any outrage from the Tea Party on this? They claim to be against an entitlement culture, and here we have very rich companies claiming that they are *entitled* to additional profits at taxpayer expense.The GOP supports this entitlement as a matter of party principle.

If the Tea Party was pitching a fit about this hypocrisy, this shameful looting of the American treasury, I might believe that group has some actual principles.
photo
isb782
JM is the Man!
01:51 AM on 05/16/2011
I have not heard any, I agree with your comment.
Layman23
Do we want to live in the past?
12:26 AM on 05/16/2011
Great. Now turning the gulf coast into a dump would be american?
11:11 PM on 05/15/2011
Ending tax breaks would be unAmerican but gouging unemployed people during a depression is not? Who says that vaudeville is dead?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tosc
10:12 PM on 05/15/2011
LOL....oil companies have room to discuss what it is to be "american?" LOLOL.....their view of being an "american" is to financiall rape your constituents every chance you get.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Maranda MassieGuthrie
my bio is empty!
09:32 PM on 05/15/2011
yes, lets get rid of all subsidies for all business that make more than the thresh hold for a growing and upcoming ventures..while we are at it, lets make lobbying illegal, then we can give our government instead of corporations control of our dollar, economy, and health!
photo
nfatt1
Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
08:25 PM on 05/15/2011
There are no more Un-American cards left in the deck, sorry !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Birdman
07:05 PM on 05/15/2011
What is un-american is the obscene profits the oil companies reap on the backs of the working man. The higher prices in the stores due to increased transportation costs, the loss of profits form many companies due to high fuel costs. The oil companies hold us all hostage to their record profit taking. The average American company has in the area of 3 to 5 % profit the Oil companies however have a 20 to 30% profit... That is plain un-american. It would make me happy if somehow some scientist tomorrow finds a cheap, easy to produce, substitute for oil. Then we can say goodbye to these robber barons.
01:10 PM on 05/15/2011
While we are at it - cut all subsidys including to farmers for "corn for ethanol" and to all the farmers that get paid to grow nothing. This is an abomination. I have never had a job where I got a subsidy of any kind. Cut regulations for small business and get the EPA off their backs. This Country to grinding to a halt because it is filled with greed and corruption.
photo
meglon978
Beware of gifts bearing Greeks.
10:26 PM on 05/15/2011
"Cut regulation­s for small business and get the EPA off their backs."

So, you'd like to live in Love Canal? Allowing a small business to poison and kill anyone it want's is not the right direction to go.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
forreal1953
12:47 PM on 05/15/2011
Even if ending the tax breaks for big oil pushes up the price of gasoline by a few cents, and I do not think it would, then it is still the right thing to do. Every penny added to the deficit is a penny that future tax payers will have to pay for. I do not think it is right to charge part of my gas to my children and grandchildren. We have put them too far into debt already.
AveragePatriot
god is imaginary
11:05 AM on 05/15/2011
Well, let's get rid of all subsidies then and make some laws concerning price gouging and cap profits. Let's also penalize companies that move their operations out of the country.

What is more unAmerican than abandoning Americans for profit?
photo
meglon978
Beware of gifts bearing Greeks.
10:27 PM on 05/15/2011
Exactly.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrJykell
Truth hunter
01:16 AM on 05/15/2011
I'll tell what's un-American--is how people can be OK with taking food off of poor peoples table during this deficit struggle----I don't care where they get the money--who is responsible for trying to take from the poor and elderly?---who is responsible for the idea of dumping medicare and medicaid instead of going after all the wealthy in the country?

Who are these people that believe our govt should break it's promise to the people?
Conservative voters should be ashamed of their representatives or themselves as well if they agree with this very un-Christian-like premise!
02:01 PM on 05/14/2011
I think a GREAT Democratic advert would be simply to run parts of the oil companies' testimony, with a laugh tract.
Black and white video.
Paid for by a PAC known as Democrats for the Little Guy, Democrat for Who's Foolin' Who?