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Raymond J. Learsy

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Rick Perry President? A Primer on What a Texas Governor's Presidency Can Do For You and the Oil Industry

Posted: 09/12/11 09:40 AM ET

Just a few days ago this corner posted my column "A Rick Perry Presidency? Get Ready for The Next Gas Spike", ruminating on the impact of Texas politicians holding the reins of power in Washington and their impact on the price of oil and your pocketbook. With Governor Perry currently leading the pack of prospective Republican nominees, perhaps it would be wise to examine the prospects of what another Texas presidency would have on the prospects of one of the core economic and environmental issues of the day.

We have as an illustrative preamble the workings of the eight years of the George W. Bush presidency to instruct us on how the levers of power can be used or misused, sometimes almost surreptitiously to maneuver the price of oil from circa $25/barrel at the outset of his tenure to $147/bbl in his last year in office. And no, it wasn't all about the free market forces of supply and demand. President Bush's White House lent a strong helping hand to the dramatic rise in oil's price.

- From the very outset the former Texas governor's priorities were crystal clear. Within days of taking office, and virtually as his first official act he appointed his fellow oilman (ex-Chairman of Halliburton), now his anointed Vice President as head of the Administration's Energy Task Force. Thereupon a 'secret' meeting with prominent oil executives was summoned at the White House, the nature of which and whose agenda is still opaque (pleadings for full disclosure were stonewalled by invoking White House rights to confidentiality. Sen. Lautenberg (D-N.J.) was to comment "The White House went to great lengths to keep these meetings secret."). Environmental groups complained bitterly that they were excluded and were never given a hearing except for a 'show' meeting, hastily organized, which never discussed much of anything.

- The president also had close ties with another Texas politician, Tom DeLay. As House majority leader Tom DeLay was known as "The Hammer" and as the oil industry's point man. Under President Bush's watch he drove home the massive 2003 energy bill providing $23.5 billion in tax breaks for oil and energy companies along with $5.4 billion in grants, subsidies, and loan guarantees. Then -- irony of ironies -- Delay, with Bush's blessing, was able to orchestrate another plum for the industry in the 2005 energy bill -- a last minute insertion of $500 million funding measure researching "ultra deep-water" oil and gas drilling. I'm sure BP can vouch for how effectively those disbursements were made.

- Then of course there was the war in Iraq with all its loss of blood and treasure. Though the Bush administration has vehemently insisted that the disastrously divisive and tragic invasion of Iraq had nothing to do with oil, many countervailing opinions have come to the fore in the context of "It Was Always About the Oil, Stupid." Perhaps most prominent was found in the memoirs of the former and then Federal Reserve Chairman, Alan Greenspan's, The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World. Calling his observation a "politically inconvenient fact", but that "The Iraq War is largely about oil."

- Then once the banner of "Mission Accomplished" was unfurled, the Bush-Cheney team left no stone unturned to assure that a now decimated Iraq would rejoin the OPEC cabal lest its potential future oil production would come into the market freely, and upset the cozy pricing arrangements organized by OPEC to the benefit of all the major oil companies and to the detriment of the economies of the world. Those priorities were so brazen that when civil order was breaking down in Iraq our then resident 'Viceroy' in Baghdad dispatched an armed contingent to protect the offices of the Iraqi Oil Ministry while Iraq's great antiquities museum was left unprotected, to be looted at will.

- As the civil strife in Iraq escalated with thousands of casualties and intermittent disruption of oil pipelines and oil facilities, sending oil prices jumping, there was never a word of condemnation to the Saudis. The Saudis were the major providers of "foreign" suicide bombers and the vast cash transfers to Sunni insurgents in Iraq. A destabilized Iraq was unable to focus on reconstructing its oil production capacity and the price of oil continued to climb, fattening coffers of the OPEC producers and the bottom line of the oil companies.

- Fraternally walking together hand in hand with King Abdullah under the Texas sky. No, I'm not kidding. In April 2005 King Abdullah visited President George W. Bush at his Crawford Ranch in Texas. Understandably oil prices and supply were a topic of discussion. The price of crude at the time was $48/bbl near to and breaching levels that had never before been achieved in the oil market and nearly fifty percent higher than the year before. Whatever was said during those meetings and fraternal hand-holdings gave King Abdullah, and thereby Saudi Arabia, and of course in turn OPEC the comfort to continue its aggressive policy of pushing prices ever skyward. Within four months of the visit the price of oil continued its aggressive spiral upward reaching $65/barrel, a staggering further increase of some 35% costing American consumers an additional $340 million per day (we consume some 20 million barrels oil/day) going into the pockets of OPEC and the bottom lines of oil companies. Even for King Abdullah, it was well worth the trip, while the oil industry cheered as the rest of America paid.

- Under President Bush's Administration those government agencies meant to monitor the activities of the oil trade and the oil industry became toothless entities if not worse. The Department of the Interior was to become so dysfunctional that in 2008, the last year of the Bush presidency, one Earl Devaney, the Department's Inspector General would find cause to comment in response to the Department's record of managerial irresponsibility and conflicts of interest with flawed oil leases costing taxpayers billions, "Short of crime, anything goes at the Department of the Interior." Congressman George Miller (D-CA.) would go one step further, commenting, "If things keep going like this, were going to need two sets of handcuffs--one for the oil companies and one for the bureaucrats."

- Having been tolerant of a miscreant Department of the Interior the Bush administration would go one step further by permitting a toothless Commodity Future Trading Commission (CFTC) to continue its slumbering inactivity undisturbed. As late as August 2008 a morsel of information clearly evident to anyone who had even the slightest connection to the oil trade was presented by the CFTC as a great and new revelation. That this revelation to the CFTC was prima facie evidence of a non-functioning organization that had already caused Senator Levin and his office to comment that traders "hesitate when somebody's watching. And when nobody's watching traders will go wild." And from the Senator himself, that it was time "to put a cop back on the beat, to stop excessive speculation and trading abuse." Under Bush '43 no one was watching and the 'cop' supposedly on the beat was too busy forever holding hearings at headquarters to even direct traffic.

- Then came the great unheralded, barely reported, test of on whose side the political class resides, whether friend or foe of the American consumer. It became a test woefully mangled by the Executive Branch. Through a quirk in our laws dealing with collusionary and antitrust practices, OPEC is permitted to operate freely, immune to these laws, being permitted to hide behind a shield of 'sovereign immunity.' The exemption has made it possible for the OPEC cartel to manipulate pricing in the oil market in a manner that oil companies and oil interests outside the cartel have benefited in the billions without themselves risking indictments for breaching antitrust statutes.

In June of 2007 a 'NOPEC' bill was proposed, so called because it would have set aside the sovereign immunity of the OPEC cartel and its state owned oil companies, permitting them to be sued under US antitrust laws as are other cartels and antitrust violators. In defiance of the strenuous objections of the oil lobby, Congress with a 70 to 23 vote in the Senate and a 345 to 72 vote in the House, indicated its willingness to pass such a bill into law. The issue however became moot when the Bush White House let it be known that the bill would be vetoed, reasons being given were that litigating against OPEC would trigger a variety of legal, political and economic headaches. Thereby the White House set a rather repugnant standard, that when being robbed, better to smile and turn over your wallet, especially when the proceeds are going to the home team.

- In his January 2007 State of the Union address President Bush would convey upon the oil producers throughout the world an unexpected gratuity. Before President Bush's address to members of Congress the price of oil was in a pronounced descent, about to retreat below $50/bbl. By the time President Bush finished his address that all had changed, the direction of oil prices reversed course, rising inexorably upwards, setting off the greatest price escalation in oil's commercial history toward $147.50/bbl a year and a half later.

Either oblivious to its ramifications, or perhaps cunningly aware, the president announced it would become government policy to double the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) from some 750 million barrels to near 1.5 billion barrels. In doing so he sent a signal interpreted by those who held sway that $50/bbl oil was not only acceptable but viewed as being a modest price level by his administration. On the very day of the speech the price of oil would jump by $2.40/bbl., the biggest single day gain since November 20, 2006.

The Department of Energy at the direction of the White House would blithely continue filling the SPR irrespective of ever ascending prices, and clearly oblivious or uncaring, that with every purchase they were blessing the ever escalating price of oil and in turn ever higher gasoline prices with its impact on American consumers and the economy. It took an act of Congress in May 2008 to get the administration to desist making further purchases, so wedded was this administration to the oil industry boondoggle the SPR program had become.

- Finally there is the unfocused morass of policy issues that over the eight years time of the Bush '43's administration did little or nothing to move us away from our dependency on oil. First there was the skepticism toward climate change, a seemingly Texas political trademark. Then a wasted eight years of lackluster initiatives in the pursuit of alternative energy solutions. The budget, over that eight year period for this issue vital to our economy, security and confronting climate change was a total of $12 billion -- about a third of what the administration was able to put on the line over a weekend to save Bear Stearns, or to cover Goldman Sachs' speculative positions with AIG.

Not only were there no initiatives to improve the nation's mass transportation infrastructure, but, thankfully, the president's request for a $400 million budget cut from Amtrak's $1.3 budget was refused by lawmakers. A request whose shortsightedness is an exemplar of our eight years lack (and sadly counting) of any decisive action on improving the nation's rail infrastructure while billions are being expended in countries all over the world from France to China to build their high speed rail services nationwide.

- Last and not necessarily least, during the Bush years there had been no persuasive attempt to abate fossil fuel consumption by mandating truly meaningful mileage standards for automobiles.

Would a Perry presidency be tempted to follow in this predecessor's footsteps? Given the incestuous interrelationship between Texas politics and oil, in many ways the Bush presidency becomes a cautionary tale.

But then one needs look at the bright side. Never once, never, have either George Bush '41 nor '43 suggested that Texas might do well to secede from the Union!

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wesley Holbrook
Retired-Marine
02:29 PM on 09/13/2011
TO: Dougded, Jesus said it, and I see it being fulfilled, open your eyes and wake-up...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Malcolm Hensley
Last of the Reagan Republicans
11:16 AM on 09/13/2011
A nice political hatchet job. May I add some relevant facts. Compare President Clinton and President Bush. Under President Clinton's 1999 budget Big Oil got $2.1 billion is subsidies and renewable energy got $1.4 billion. Under President Bush's budget 2007 Big Oil got $2.1 billion in subsidies and renewable energy got $4.9 billion in subsidies.

But let's look at the $2.1 billion in Big Oil subsidies. Big Oil does not qualify for them because of the ATM (that's right the Alternative Minimum Tax). Almost all the petroleum and natural gas subsidies go to the 1000's of small energy companies. A good move I think the last thing we want is Big Oil having more control over our oil supply.

http://www.eia.gov/oiaf/servicerpt/subsidy2/pdf/execsum.pdf

Forbes has an interesting article supporting President Obama's misguided thought to eliminate the petroleum and natural gas subsidies. The writer from Forbes of course supported the idea because it would make the oil industry more efficient. In Wall Street speech that means lay offs and mergers to make Big Oil stronger!

http://www.forbes.com/2011/05/02/eliminate-oil-subsidies.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Malcolm Hensley
Last of the Reagan Republicans
11:16 AM on 09/13/2011
As for pricing of oil this should always be done in terms of inflation to make the numbers relevant.

http://inflationdata.com/inflation/inflation_rate/historical_oil_prices_table.asp

Look at oil prices adjusted for inflation. Would you characterize President Carter as an oil man?

This chart might help. As you mentioned OPEC, I believe we should neutralize them and the oil speculators by tripling Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR). At the same time we need to stop using oil as an energy for transportation. We as a nation need to use Natural gas, Electricity, anything but oil for our transportation needs!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Heroldness
11:14 AM on 09/13/2011
No matter how rich the rich get, or how much profits the oil companies make we the consumers will continue to get the short end of the stick. Let's face it, without fuel our lives become almost impossible. How do we get to work, how do farmers grow our food and get it to market, how do our factories produce products giving us a paycheck and so many more things we can't even comprehend. It's easy for the Bush's and Perry's and OPEC leaders of the world to screw us over. We do not have the collective will to put up with the pain and agony that the oil companies will rain down on our heads in order to make us pay for turning away from them to cheaper renewable energy sources. Right now we also do not have a strong economy so that many of us who could be persuaded to join the fight simply can't.

If you think I'm wrong, just take a look at all the TV ads Chevron is now running to convince you that they are researching alternative energy and that what is good for them is good for us. Has anyone asked to see their research budget in comparsion to their profits? Do you really believe that alternative energy is a "good thing" for them????? Maybe.................the day the oil runs out and there is no doubt in my mind that they will find another way to have us over a barrel.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cassie reinara
10:58 AM on 09/13/2011
Rick Perry, President? The standard response should be in Boehner's own words, "Hell, No!" We just had a president from Texas and what did we get? Two illegal and unnecessary wars, record job loss, more Americans falling into poverty, a ballooning deficit compared to surplus when he took office, tax cuts which were mostly for the rich, unfunded boondoggle called Medicare Part D, Katrina, and last but not least 9/11. Unless Americans are stupid and/or masochistic, the answer to another Republican occupying the White House should be a resounding no!
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DismayedRepub
300km/s Not just common sense, it’s the law
02:02 AM on 09/13/2011
Been there, done that, got the scars. Read my lips, No new Texans.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
haval2
what to say?
01:00 PM on 09/13/2011
Let's hope not...this man is dangerous and doesn't even know it. F & F
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
avacat
12:38 AM on 09/13/2011
Candidates from both parties accept donations from Big Oil, Banks..you name it. Do you think Obama got elected on 5 buck donations from John Q. Public ? He had the insurance companies in before Obamacare was more than an idea, and I don't think it was for a cup of tea.
What the writer fails to understand is the pent up anger and frustration in the country, you cannot scare them into voting for an abject failure twice.. You know what they say about ''fool me once, etc."
03:33 AM on 09/14/2011
I think Mr. Learsy understands our anger and frustration. His cautionary tale was well written, even if the facts he quoted were more about Bush administration activities than anything Perry has done as governor inTexas.
oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
12:27 AM on 09/13/2011
3.34 gas....why wait for the next spike when we already have one now.
FreeHat
Really?
12:04 AM on 09/13/2011
The oil that the US consumes is used primarily for cars/trucks. Has to do with Middle East oil being cheaper to use for these purposes...However, no other nation has successfully started to trend away from using oil in their automobiles - and they were and are not run by the Bush administrations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wesley Holbrook
Retired-Marine
11:24 PM on 09/12/2011
Anyone who defends the rich, are crooked, period!!!!!! When Perry and the Tea-Baggers' defend them, they are not followers of Jesus Christ, they are false Christians...Jesus said that hardly a rich man would enter the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 19:23), and because the rich say that they are rich and increased with goodsand have need of nothing (no need of him); they don't know that they are really wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind (spiritually), and naked...(Revelation 3:17). So much for them hiding behind Religion and the Flag. Beware of them. They only care about the rich they serve.
09:47 AM on 09/13/2011
Whom are you to judge who is a Christian? Jesus also said "judge not lest you be judged" and he said "forgive you brother and you will be forgiven". I see just hate in your comments, not rational thinking. Therefore as Jesus advised" refute the evil ways ". Does it apply to you? Hummm?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wesley Holbrook
Retired-Marine
02:46 PM on 09/13/2011
Dougded, by their fruits you shall know them ( Matthew 7:20 ). Jesus said it, if you have a problem with him, I suggest you take it up with him.
03:37 AM on 09/14/2011
There are also good people of means. I think we should be more precise about who we criticize.
11:18 PM on 09/12/2011
When you have committed judiciary nothing can work. How else do you explain the recognition of corporations as individuals for the purpose of undisclosed political donations? There probably isn't even a law that requires a corporation to declare all the political donations in its annual reports to the share holders.

The strangest part about the whole US public opinion is the fact that a cheating politician (having extramarital affairs - which I believe to be an accepted norm for the AMERICAN WAY OF LIFE) is taken to task by the public and the media to force resignation while the out right crooks get away with everything hiding behind the cloak of national security and presidential pardons.
10:41 PM on 09/12/2011
Considering that one on Rick Perry's only two "As" in college was in World Military Systems, I think we could expect more unnecessary wars during a Perry Presidency. Iran War, anyone?
08:08 PM on 09/12/2011
RESPONDING TO YOUR COMMENT: I 've started at 2009 and am still going toward the final goal.
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07:51 PM on 09/12/2011
By extension then, Obama is as big a crook as the rest of the Chicago machine, Richard Daley, Al Capone, Blago, etc, etc, The author would do well to remember this sounds like state residence racism
10:43 PM on 09/12/2011
So the oil industry hasn't donated to Rick Perry's political campaigns and he's not beholden to their interests?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
07:34 PM on 09/12/2011
Thanks for the excellent article.
09:50 AM on 09/13/2011
And you believe that only the Republicans take money from oil companies....... Well you are the Dems guy for sure. Both eyes closed as tight as that brain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
12:14 PM on 09/13/2011
No, politicians on both sides of the aisle are bought and paid for by corporate interests. I heard a statistic that there are dozens of lobbyists of all kinds for every single politician.