Fracking is quickly emerging as an under-the-radar issue likely to influence the Democratic presidential primary in 2016, inflaming passionate opposition among the party’s base.
The use of hydraulic fracturing to extract oil and gas has created thousands of new jobs and drastically increased domestic energy production, but it has also raised major environmental and health concerns.
Not unlike the issue of Common Core educational standards among conservatives, fracking touches a nerve with rank-and-file progressives, especially in rural areas, even as it gets less attention from cosmopolitan Democrats, who will likely never encounter a fracking well in their backyard.
Anti-fracking activists on the left have been disappointed by the Obama White House’s acquiescence to the technique — it’s hard for any president to turn down jobs during a recession — and are pressuring those who might be the Democratic Party’s next presidential nominee to draw a harder line.
Activists have already knocked former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and are turning their sights on other potential candidates.
New York and Maryland are the only two states with shale formations that haven’t yet allowed drilling. As it happens, both states have popular Democratic governors with major national ambitions.
In New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said that anti-fracking activists are by far the visible pressure group in the state. “I literally see them everywhere I go,” he told Capital New York. “One of my daughters joked — we were pulling up to an event — she said, ‘We must be in the wrong place. There are no fracking protesters.’”
Last year, anti-fracking activists ran a full-page ad in The Des Moines Register — far from Albany, but close to the Iowa Caucuses — warning Cuomo: “Not one well.”
And the pressure is now on Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley. In a letter sent to him Thursday, a coalition of more than 200 environmental, progressive and health groups fired a warning shot across the bow of the nascent O’Malley presidential effort.
If he runs for president —and it’s looking increasingly like he will – the governor will want to be the consensus progressive alternative to Clinton. With progressive icon Sen. Elizabeth Warren unlikely to enter the race, O’Malley has a good shot at carrying that mantle, though he may have to compete with others like Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
O’Malley has been working hard to lay the groundwork for a campaign, and he has positioned himself to the left of Clinton on everything from immigration to campaign finance.
Fracking would be another obvious place for him to draw a contrast with the former secretary of state, who has said she will announce her 2016 plans early next year. If O’Malley doesn’t do that, however, some activists are warning he could risk his position as a leading liberal alternative.
“If Gov. O’Malley is serious about making a play for progressive ‘Warren-wing’ Democratic voters in the 2016 presidential primary, he should know better than to do Wall Street’s bidding and put the health of millions at risk by allowing fracking to come to Maryland on his watch,” said Jim Dean, the chair of Democracy for America, a national organization that grew out of Howard Dean’s 2004 presidential campaign.









