GOP reaction to Obama oil tax plan - 'Good Grief!'
WASHINGTON, Feb. 10, 2016 - President
Barack Obama has taken some major steps to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions, notably by imposing carbon limits on electric utilities and by
increasing fuel efficiency requirements for cars and trucks. Now, he’s
proposing another big step that he can’t do on his own – a tax on oil.
The $10-a-barrel levy has no chance in
this Congress. Republicans greeted the idea with derision and Democrats were
largely quiet. But the idea could well be picked up by a future Democratic
administration. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has predicted that Congress will
pass the tax if Democrats win the White House and take control of the Senate.
Obama’s proposed tax, which the White
House prefers to call a fee, would fund what the administration’s “21st Century Clean Transportation System,” which would include improvements in public transportation
as well as new automotive technologies, such as self-driving, or electric
vehicles.
Some $20 billion would go into mass
transit, including development of maglev trains, while $2 billion a year would
go into development of “climate smart” cars. Another $10 billion would go
toward transforming regional transportation systems.
Some revenue from the oil tax also
would be used to help families in the Northeast transition from fuel oil to
heat sources with lower emissions.
“As I said in my State of the Union
address, rather than subsidize the past, we should invest in the future,” Obama
said last weekend. The
budget proposal, released today, will “help the private sector create more jobs
faster, lower the cost of clean energy faster, and help clean, renewable power
outcompete dirty fuels in every state.”
The Republican reaction shows why a
carbon tax will still be a tough sell on Capitol Hill no matter how Democrats
do in the fall elections, especially since few analysts believe Democrats have
a real chance of taking control of the House.
“Good grief,” said House Energy and Commerce Chairman Fred Upton,
R-Mich. “The president’s proposed new tax will hurt those
most vulnerable. Jump-starting the economy by raising taxes is not a solution.”
House Speaker Paul Ryan said the proposal shows Obama is “on a mission to
destroy a major backbone of the U.S. economy.”
#30
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