Daschle Says He Will Vote for Energy Bill
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
November 19, 2003, 10:02 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senate Democratic leader Tom
Daschle is ready to support the broad energy bill
and will oppose attempts to scuttle it by a
filibuster, one of the senator's aides said
Wednesday.
The decision casts doubt on whether opponents can
succeed in blocking the bill through a filibuster
over a dispute involving the gasoline additive
MTBE, which has been found to contaminate drinking
water supplies.
A spokesman for Daschle, Dan Pfeiffer, said the
South Dakota senator will vote for ending debate
on the bill, overcoming a filibuster, as long as
senators are given time to adequately debate the
legislation.
"There is a lot of legitimate concern about the
bill on both sides of the aisle ... (but) he will
support it because of ethanol and other provisions
in the bill on energy efficiency," Pfeiffer said.
On Wednesday night, Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist, R-Tenn., and other Republicans set a
parliamentary vote for Friday for ending the
debate. That would force a final up-or-down
decision on the 1,100-page bill.
Republicans hope to finish the bill and send it to
President Bush before the end of the week. The
House passed the energy legislation by a wide
margin on Tuesday.
Earlier in the day, Daschle made known his support
of the bill in an interview with a Yankton, S.D.,
radio station, WNAX, in which he said that while
the legislation wasn't perfect, it was good news
for ethanol and other renewable fuels.
South Dakota is a major producer of corn-based
ethanol. The bill calls for doubling ethanol
production to 5 billion gallons a year by 2012.
As Senate debate began Wednesday on the
GOP-written bill, some Republican lawmakers
prepared to break ranks in a showdown over a
provision that would shield makers of MTBE for
product liability lawsuits charging that it is
polluting water supplies.
A number of Democrats, joined by a handful of
Republicans, have been considering a filibuster
over the issue, but it's uncertain how much
support they have. The stalling procedure can be
turned back by 60 votes.
"It's neck-and-neck, it's a horse race," Sen.
Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said of the informal vote
count. "We'll certainly lose some Democrats and
we'll certainly pick up some Republicans."
Daschle's support has been seen as crucial to the
bill's passage. Daschle said in the radio
interview that he was disappointed with the MTBE
waiver but that he would support an end to debate
as long as senators were given adequate time to
debate the issue and the bill.
Senate approval is the last hurdle to getting the
bill to President Bush, who is eager to sign it.
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who opposes the bill
because of the MTBE waiver and other issues said,
"I've been for ethanol for 21 years, and I just
can't do this. That's a bargain with the devil."
Some Republicans, especially those from New
Hampshire, Maine and Arizona have protested the
industry subsidies in the bill as well as the MTBE
liability provision.
"If a person cannot live in their home, is that
not a health hazard?" Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H.,
angrily asked Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., on the
Senate floor. The bill would undermine New
Hampshire's lawsuit against 22 oil companies over
MTBE water contamination.
They complained the bill subsidizes Midwest
coal-fired power plants whose air pollution drifts
over the Northeast and will not fix problems that
led to the Aug. 14 blackout.
"It is biased against the Northeast," said Sen.
Susan Collins, R-Maine. "This bill does not offer
the balanced energy policy that America needs."
But Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., called it "truly
the best bill this Congress can produce. ... We
all have something to gain from this compromise."
The bill resulted from 2 1/2 months of sometimes
bitter negotiations between House and Senate
Republicans and almost no input from Democrats. It
would provide $23 billion in tax incentives and
includes measures to produce more coal, oil,
natural gas and nuclear power.
Last modified: 19 November 2003
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