iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

'Drill, Baby, Drill' Remains Republican Solution Even After Oil Spill

Republicans Drilling Oil Gas Energy

By DINA CAPPIELLO   10/27/11 03:06 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON -- It's still "drill, baby, drill." After the nation's largest offshore oil spill and a series of pipeline breaks, Republican presidential candidates are pushing an aggressive policy of oil and gas drilling that echoes the party's rallying cry from four years ago.

This time around, the calls for more drilling are sometimes running into another conservative ideal – preserving wild places for future generations. The millions of gallons of oil that spilled into the Gulf of Mexico last year and the crude that flowed from pipelines into Montana's Yellowstone River and Michigan's Kalamazoo River have put a spotlight on the environmental risks of energy production.

But with jobs and the economy in the forefront, nearly every GOP White House contender has a plan to harness the nation's resources as a way to create employment by getting rid of environmental rules and opening up vast areas to drilling.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry says we are sitting "on a treasure trove of energy in this country." Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has said "we're an energy-rich nation that's acting like an energy-poor nation." And since former House Speaker Newt Gingrich in 2008 published his book "Drill Here, Drill Now, Pay Less," he has touted more drilling in Alaska and the West to create jobs and drive down gasoline prices.

Some of the ideas sound like they're inherited directly from former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the 2008 vice presidential nominee who popularized "drill, baby drill."

At the party's national convention that year, Palin told the crowd, "We need American energy resources, brought to you by American ingenuity and produced by American workers."

Perry, announcing his jobs plan at a steel mill in Pittsburgh this month said, "The quickest way to give our economy a shot in the arm is to deploy American ingenuity to tap American energy."

For some, no place is off limits.

Romney thinks the country can drill safely off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, and in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann says she would consider drilling in the Florida Everglades, if it could be done responsibly. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who also wants to open up the Arctic refuge to drilling, has accused President Barack Obama of putting caribou ahead of "something good for our country and our economy" because he said he won't drill there. And businessman Herman Cain believes the idea that high energy consumption and conservation are at odds is a myth peddled by liberals.

Voters will face a bright-line choice next year on the presidential ballot between the GOP nominee and Obama, who has taken a much more cautious approach to expanding oil and gas production – so cautious that GOP critics accuse him of intentionally locking up resources. His administration did give BP the go-ahead this week to drill a new deepwater well in the Gulf of Mexico, the company's first since its catastrophic spill last year. The administration also has granted other companies deepwater permits in recent months.

Romney has said that the spill provided Obama "political cover" for policies to limit drilling, such as the six-month moratorium on new deepwater exploration put in place after the spill. Perry has called the spill "just an act of God" that could not have been prevented. Investigations by the federal government and the companies involved have blamed a series of faulty decisions for the blowout that killed 11 and sent more than 200 million gallons of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

In an interview in September, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, defended the administration's approach.

"I don't think we should be drilling anywhere and everywhere, and I think those who propose it are wrong," Salazar said. "Drilling for oil in Everglades is not going to resolve the energy challenges we face as a country. What we need to do is to have a broad energy portfolio ... that does include oil and gas, but it has to be done in the right places and it has to be done with the right kind of review and the right kind of regulatory oversight."

Even within the GOP, not everyone shares the view of the primary contenders.

After Bachmann's comment on the Everglades, for example, Rep. Allen West, R-Fla., sent her a letter arguing that "the Everglades represents one of the most cherished treasures of the United States, and should be off limits for exploration of any kind of natural energy resource."

Conservation-minded Republicans have invoked President Ronald Reagan and the late conservative Sen. Barry Goldwater in arguing for the protection of natural resources.

"It's like the value of having a little extra oil trumps every other value that Americans have had throughout our history," said David Jenkins of Republicans for Environmental Protection, who told a House panel in September that it was disingenuous to claim that drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge – originally set aside by Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower – could be done with minimal impact.

William K. Reilly, the top environmental official under President George H.W. Bush, and a member of Obama's commission on the Gulf oil spill, has warned about the risks of a spill in waters off Alaska.

Public support for drilling dropped after the Gulf oil spill, but the change was temporary. In February 2010, two months before the spill, a Pew Research Center poll found 63 percent of adults favored more offshore drilling in U.S. waters, with 31 percent opposed. Support for offshore drilling dropped as low as 44 percent by June, after the spill. But by March of this year, it had rebounded to 57 percent in favor and 37 percent opposed.

___

Follow Dina Cappiello on Twitter (at)dinacappiello

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
WASHINGTON -- It's still "drill, baby, drill." After the nation's largest offshore oil spill and a series of pipeline breaks, Republican presidential candidates are pushing an aggressive policy of oil...
WASHINGTON -- It's still "drill, baby, drill." After the nation's largest offshore oil spill and a series of pipeline breaks, Republican presidential candidates are pushing an aggressive policy of oil...
Filed by Luke Johnson  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 206
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (7 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:18 PM on 11/03/2011
Oil prices are high, and oil production in the US is climbing.

The Deepwater spill was a huge media bonanza, with a chicken little predictions of an apocalypse. 18 months later, the tourists are still coming, the boats are still fishing, and liberal magazines like the New Yorker run articles about how oiled birds are hard to find.

Basically, drill baby drill is still the plan, because drill baby drill was vindicated. The Dakotas have rock bottom unemployment from drill baby drill. The term "shaleionaire" was coined because of drill baby drill. Natural gas prices are at a 8 year low because of drill baby drill.

It's a winning strategy. That's why Obama won't run against it.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
09:30 AM on 11/02/2011
Wouldn't it be nice if the country would split into two - basically liberal and conservative? An equitable split that everyone could live with. No bloodshed, no revolution, just a resignation that we no longer can live together, that the two sides are too far apart to agree on anything; as opposite as MSNBC and Fox News.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stape45
No brag, just fact.
02:51 PM on 10/29/2011
“Drill baby drill”
(Even after the spill?)
If the voters don’t get ‘em,
Then karma sure will.
11:26 AM on 10/29/2011
I'm gonna drill my fist into his face if this GOP candidate keeps on talkinf non-sense. look what happen to the gulf of mexico.
photo
ruthtruth
seeker of truth, willing to listen
09:10 AM on 10/29/2011
What all these people mentioned in this article above need is a hole drilled in their heads and some brains and common sense poured in. As for Sarah, forget it, it's too late.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:47 AM on 10/29/2011
"This time around, the calls for more drilling are sometimes running into another conservative ideal – preserving wild places for future generations. "

Huh? When did this become a conservative ideal?
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Chris1962
NYC
08:11 AM on 10/29/2011
>>>At the party's national convention that year, Palin told the crowd, "We need American energy resources, brought to you by American ingenuity and produced by American workers.">>> Perish the thought.
08:07 AM on 10/29/2011
Start with their heads.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zanzig
08:30 AM on 10/29/2011
Futile exercise if they are vacuums.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LickMyDecalsOffBaby
SafeAsMilk
07:57 AM on 10/29/2011
Anyone who says we can drill in these environmetally sensitive areas has never set foot on a drilling rig and has no idea of what is involved in drilling an oil well. I worked as a roughneck in my younger years, and I'm here to say it would wreak havoc on these areas.
photo
ruthtruth
seeker of truth, willing to listen
09:12 AM on 10/29/2011
You are one who knows but unfortunately the ones who need to listen won't. :(
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:47 PM on 11/03/2011
Ummm ... you're not aware that technology has revolutionized the oil and gas industry, then?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RC Hindle
"Power isn't all that money buys"
07:54 AM on 10/29/2011
Look, these folks (GOP candidates) all are bought and paid for by big oil, especially Perry. I see a lot of comments on where the oil goes after it's drilled, and yes, I believe that its to the open market. So....All the TP/GOP bozos are saying is "let's get more money to the oil companies." Period. What they're trying to do is convince their base that this is good for America, which anyone with a bit of sense knows isn't necessarily true. If the oil drilled here was staying here...well that's a different story, but these yoyos all know how this works.

I find it kinda sad that after all this time, these folks still think we're going to believe ANY of this.
photo
ruthtruth
seeker of truth, willing to listen
09:13 AM on 10/29/2011
There are still so many out there that do belive this crap. Very sad.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
07:34 AM on 10/29/2011
Drill Baby Drill + deregulation = Spill Baby Spill + more record profits + Government responsible for cleanup
privatizing the profits and socializing the losses, that's what makes America Great! / snark
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
shryock
It never is what it is anymore
07:43 AM on 10/29/2011
I think you miss-labeled one of the elements of your formula.
"Government responsibl­e for cleanup" should read "TAXPAYER responsible for cleanup."

and to hear the Republican candidates talk, no one ever should have to pay taxes in the first place, so I can only conclude that, if elected, the Republicans will never pay anyone to clean anything up because they will never collect taxes to do it with.

Most likely, they will simply leave the mess, or will make us clean it ourselves since that is evidently one of our "freedoms" for which they are all fighting so hard.

And that might be snark, but that does not make it any less true.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
houseofd
An educated, informed American is a true Patriot.
04:09 AM on 10/29/2011
Well, you can't have ignorance without ignoring something.
photo
LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
01:44 AM on 10/29/2011
There hasn't been a new idea out of the conservatives for more than 30 years.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stape45
No brag, just fact.
07:33 AM on 10/29/2011
And back then, it was one bad idea after another.
photo
LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
01:05 PM on 10/29/2011
Up until the mid 60s the conservative Republican platform looked almost identical to the current liberal platform. That began to change with Nixon and jumped off the cliff when Reagan took office.
01:24 AM on 10/29/2011
It is often said that to decide in ignorance is to risk disaster. But to make the same decision after the disaster is beyond mere ignorance. Its Republican!
12:03 AM on 10/29/2011
The next time there is a big oil spill - and it's just a matter of time, folks - all of the Republican presidentail candidates should be taken out to it in their fancy debate clothes and THROWN IN.
09:36 AM on 10/29/2011
I'd pay for a tickeet to see that! . . . .Proceeds donated to the World Wildlife Foundation , , That might be more painful for the Republs than the oil on their pretty little suits . . .