More On Hussein’s Sudden Flip Flop On Offshore Drilling
I lost count. How many flip flops does this make it for the wannabe Savior N Chief?
August 2, 2008
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said Friday he would be willing to support limited additional offshore oil drilling if that’s what it takes to enact a comprehensive policy to foster fuel-efficient autos and develop alternate energy sources.
Shifting from his previous opposition to expanded offshore drilling, the Illinois senator told a Florida newspaper he could get behind a compromise with Republicans and oil companies to prevent gridlock over energy.
Republican rival John McCain, who earlier dropped his opposition to offshore drilling, has been criticizing Obama on the stump and in broadcast ads for clinging to his opposition as gasoline prices topped $4 a gallon. Polls indicate these attacks have helped McCain gain ground on Obama.
“My interest is in making sure we’ve got the kind of comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices,” Obama said in an interview with The Palm Beach Post.
“If, in order to get that passed, we have to compromise in terms of a careful, well thought-out drilling strategy that was carefully circumscribed to avoid significant environmental damage — I don’t want to be so rigid that we can’t get something done.”
Asked about Obama’s comment, McCain said, “We need oil drilling and we need it now offshore. He has consistently opposed it. He has opposed nuclear power. He has opposed reprocessing. He has opposed storage.” The GOP candidate said Obama doesn’t have a plan equal to the nation’s energy challenges.
In Congress, both parties have fought bitterly over energy policy for weeks, with Republicans pressing for more domestic oil drilling and Democrats railing about oil company profits. Despite hundreds of hours of House and Senate floor debate, lawmakers will leave Washington for their five-week summer hiatus this week with an empty tank.
“The Republicans and the oil companies have been really beating the drums on drilling,” Obama said in the Post interview. “And so we don’t want gridlock. We want to get something done.”
Later, Obama issued a written statement warmly welcoming a proposal sent to Senate leaders Friday by 10 senators — five from each party. Their proposal seeks to break the impasse over offshore oil development and is expected to be examined more closely in September after Congress returns from its summer recess.
The so-called Gang of 10 plan would lift drilling bans in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, but retain an environmental buffer zone extending 50 miles off Florida’s beaches and in the South Atlantic off Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia, but only if a state agrees to the oil and gas development along its coast. The states would share in revenues from oil and gas development.
Drilling bans along the Pacific coast and the Northeast would remain in place under this compromise.
The plan also includes energy initiatives Obama has endorsed. “It would repeal tax breaks for oil companies so that we can invest billions in fuel-efficient cars, help our automakers re-tool, and make a genuine commitment to renewable sources of energy like wind power, solar power, and the next generation of clean, affordable biofuels,” Obama noted.
“Like all compromises, it also includes steps that I haven’t always supported,” Obama conceded. “I remain skeptical that new offshore drilling will bring down gas prices in the short-term or significantly reduce our oil dependence in the long-term, though I do welcome the establishment of a process that will allow us to make future drilling decisions based on science and fact.”
Nevertheless, Obama said the plan, put forward by mostly moderates and conservatives led by Sens. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., and Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., “represents a good faith effort at a new bipartisan beginning.”
Earlier in the day, Obama pushed for a windfall profits tax to fund $1,000 emergency rebate checks for consumers besieged by high energy costs, a counter to McCain’s call for more offshore drilling.
The pitch for putting some of the economic burden of $4-a-gallon gasoline on the oil industry served a dual purpose for Obama: It allowed him to talk up an economic issue, seen by many as a strength for Democrats and a weakness for Republicans, and at the same time respond to criticism from McCain that Obama’s opposition to offshore drilling leads to higher prices at the pump.
In linking McCain to the unpopular President Bush, Obama struck a theme from Ronald Reagan’s successful 1980 campaign against President Jimmy Carter by asking a town-hall audience in St. Petersburg: “Do you think you are better off than you were four years ago or eight years ago? If you aren’t better off, can you afford another four years?”
Obama primed the crowd by noting new government figures showing 51,000 jobs lost last month and citing 460,000 jobs lost over the last seven months. He tied other bad economic news from the Bush administration to McCain and offered his energy program as one route to relief.
“This rebate will be enough to offset the increased cost of gas for a working family over the next four months,” Obama said during a two-day campaign swing in Florida. “It will be enough to cover the entire increase in your heating bills. Or you could use the rebate for any of your other bills, or even to pay down your own debt.”
(AP)




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He has waffled so many times that he’s forgotton his original lie!
August 3rd, 2008 at 8:27 am“I remain skeptical that new offshore drilling will bring down gas prices in the short-term or significantly reduce our oil dependence in the long-term”
He’ll be as right about this as he was about the Surge.
August 3rd, 2008 at 8:40 amHow many flips? Not sure but I think I saw a count elsewhere that has the total at around 12 or so. But to the moral/political relativism that is Marxist ideology that’s all in a day’s work. Do and say whatever it takes.
Leave it to the AP to end the story ‘on a high note’ though, reminding everyone of Barry’s Bribe…. Vote For Me, Get A Thousand Bucks!
Gonna have to steal ALL the oil company profits and then some to fund THAT “Emergency Economic Plan” Barry.
Get used to the word “emergency” too. The Marxists gain power and the next one will be the ‘Emergency Civilian National Security Force Act of 2009′. Then the ‘Emergency Climate Restoration Act’….so on and so on ad infinitum.
“…new government figures showing 51,000 jobs lost last month and citing 460,000 jobs lost over the last seven months.”
http://i78.photobucket.com/albums/j97/stars5501/GMJobs-1.gif
Thank ‘I’m saving the planet’ Nanzi’s Politburo for all that.
August 3rd, 2008 at 8:48 amYou need to add his 1,287th flip flop which happened yestereday
he had been for CUTTING the NASA budget last year, but suddenly when talking to NASA scientists he is now for fully funding their programs.
but then again, Obamessiah NEVER changes his positions. We are just too stupid to understand what his ideas have been all along!
August 3rd, 2008 at 8:49 amIf we could only raise taxes… just a bit… just on those creating the jobs… everything would be so much better.
Only if the Europeans loved us more… [sigh]
Oh, almost forgot; only if we had more air in our tires…
August 3rd, 2008 at 9:15 amhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdM5J99LYRo
August 3rd, 2008 at 9:52 amOld Billy Bubba Clinton still has him beat, though. Remember “This is the worst economy in 50 yars!”? I’ll never, ever forget the constant string of whoppers that guy told; the bigger the better, too.
August 3rd, 2008 at 10:13 amhe knows his leftie base is going to vote for him anyway so he’ll say anything to get some of the 70percent that say they support drilling
August 3rd, 2008 at 3:19 pm