OPINION

Democrats Attempt to Enable EPA Power Grab

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With the House poised to pass the Upton-Whitfield-Inhofe Energy Tax Prevention Act [pdf], all eyes are on the Senate to see if Republicans can muster up the 60 votes necessary to prevent the EPA’s backdoor implementation of cap-and-trade. Hoping to parlay the House’s action into a Senate victory, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) unexpectedly offered the Energy Tax Prevention Act as an amendment to the Small Business Innovation Research re-authorization bill.

Fearing that the McConnell Amendment might actually pass, Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.V.) introduced his toothless EPA legislation in order to undermine support for the GOP alternative and give Democrats cover in 2012.

Conservatives have seen this story play out before. A year ago Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) was building support for her Resolution of Disapproval filed under the Congressional Review Act (CRA) which would prohibit the EPA from regulating greenhouse gases. Due to obscure CRA rules, Republicans only needed to garner 50 votes—as oppose to the usual 60 vote requisite—and Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) had to allow a vote.

With 23 Democrats up for reelection in 2012, many couldn’t afford to vote against Murkowski’s Resolution of Disapproval but, much to their constituents’ dismay, wanted the EPA to move forward with its regulations. Relieving Democrats from this catch 22, Senator Rockefeller proposed a separate EPA bill which Democrats could hide behind but would do little to halt the EPA’s march.

When it came time to vote for the CRA, most Democrats acknowledged the EPA’s problematic regulations but didn’t vote for the Murkowski measure saying they would vote for the Rockefeller bill when it came to the floor. The Murkowski CRA failed and the 111th Congress came and went without a vote on Rockefeller’s bill.

Sen. Rockefeller is back at it again, this time trying to scuttle the McConnell amendment. Next week, Reid is expected to hold votes on the two amendments so some Democrats can vote for the McConnell amendment and some can vote for the Rockefeller amendment, but neither will pass. Given that the EPA debate has moved to the forefront of voters’ minds, this is a risky strategy for Democrats up in 2012.

Substantively, the two bills couldn’t be farther apart. The McConnell Amendment prevents the EPA from regulating greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act, unless Congress explicitly tells them to. The Rockefeller amendment only delays a handful of EPA regulations for two years, implicitly endorsing the EPA’s cap-and-trade scheme.

The Rockefeller proposal has serious flaws. As of January 2011, the EPA has already begun regulating greenhouse gases so a delay bill will no longer have a meaningful impact. It does not touch the EPA’s impending National Air Ambient Quality standards, regulations which independent estimates fear could cost $1 trillion per year in compliance costs and would lead to the loss of 7 million jobs [pdf]. It does not prevent the EPA from creating carbon standards for vehicles or from withholding construction permits.

Democrats who decry the EPA and vote solely for the Rockefeller amendment are blatantly trying to hoodwink their constituents. The upcoming McConnell vote is not a referendum on climate science, as Democrats would have you believe, but on who will set the climate policy for this country. Unable to pass cap-and-trade through Congress the Administration enlisted the EPA to subvert the legislative branch and enact its preferred energy and environment policies. The McConnell amendment is about who will write this country’s energy laws, Congress or the EPA. Taxpayers need to put Congress on notice that they will not be fooled by Democrats’ fraudulent attempts to prevent backdoor implementation of cap-and-trade.