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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush

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To: zonkie who wrote (2636)4/23/2001 7:33:50 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) of 93284
 

The Toxic Texan's
horse's hooves thunder across the tender plants in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
The plants will shrivel and die. The birds, moose and other wildlife in the area will die from lack of food.

But Indifference is the Light that the Toxic Texan and his companion the Noxious Norton follow. It's pay back time for all that campaign money from the oil, timber and mining and chemical industries!!!! - Mephisto

Monday April 23 12:52 PM ET
Bush Task Force Will Recommend Alaska Drilling

By Patricia Wilson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Seeking to
clarify a muddied message on oil
exploration in the Alaska wilderness, the
White House said on Monday President
Bush's energy panel would call for drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Bush made opening about 8 percent of the refuge's coastal plain for
exploration central to his long-term solution to U.S. energy shortages
and a major plank of his election campaign.

``The president's position is as it always has been,'' White House
spokesman Ari Fleischer said. ``The president
believes we can and we should, in an environmentally responsible way,
open up a small portion of ANWR so we can explore for oil.''


Environmental Protection Agency administrator Christine Todd Whitman said on Sunday the White House energy task force's report would not specifically cite drilling in the refuge as a vital option. Her remarks came after senior Bush adviser Karl Rove reportedly told a Republican consultant the president would not push for drilling there.

But Fleischer said Bush's position remained the same and that the
president ``intends to fight for it.''

``That will be part of the energy plan that is presented to the president
and nothing has changed,'' he told reporters.

The idea of drilling in the arctic refuge has little appeal in Congress and
Bush faces widespread opposition from environmentalists who cite it as
a pristine home to teeming herds of caribou and other wildlife.

His administration has taken a public relations beating recently over
some of its environmental stands and the comments from Whitman and
Rove were seen as part of a continuing effort to reverse what Interior
Secretary Gale Norton portrayed as a failure ``to get our message
across.''

Part Of The Plan

In recent weeks, Bush withdrew from talks on a global warming treaty;
declined for now to implement tougher standards for arsenic in drinking
water; reneged on a campaign pledge to require power plants to control
emissions of carbon dioxide, and took other actions critics say show he
is more interested in helping industry than protecting the environment.

To shore up its environmental image, the White House last week made
several announcements with fanfare, including upholding rules from the
Democratic administration of former President Clinton (news - web
sites) requiring thousands more businesses to disclose potentially toxic
lead emissions and signing a global treaty aimed at curbing toxic
chemicals.

Trying to limit the damage from the arsenic controversy, Whitman said
on Wednesday said she had asked the National Academy of Sciences
to review the issue and that a new rule would call for
a reduction of arsenic in drinking water of at least 60 percent from
current allowable levels. A Clinton plan would have reduced levels by
80 percent.

Whitman, a member of the panel that has been studying energy options
to present to Bush, clarified her own statement on drilling in the refuge,
saying later on Sunday the task force would not make specific
recommendations on where to drill.

``We aren't specifically saying you should or should not'' drill in specific
locations, Whitman said. ``We haven't taken anything off the table or put
anything on.''

The Cabinet-level panel, headed by Vice President Dick Cheney and appointed on Jan. 29, is expected to report by mid-May. Norton, who also sits on the task force, defended the idea of drilling in the refuge.

``That's an area that has been for decades designated as a place where
we might want to have oil production at some point. And so it's a
question that needs to be addressed by Congress,'' she said.

Congressional Republican leaders have omitted from their pending 2002
budget resolutions any revenues from drilling in the refuge, seeking to
avoid a fight.

Bush asked for a plan to fight high energy prices and reduce
dependence on foreign oil, to encourage development of pipelines and
power-generating capacity and to find ways to cope with California's
electricity supply shortage.

``Our energy plan will look at a number of diverse ways to increase
supply,'' a White House official said. ``One of a diverse number of ways
to increase supply is to open a small part of ANWR to exploration.''

``It will be part of the plan,'' he said.
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