Sen. Mary Landrieu’s Hail Mary was an incomplete.
The Senate on Tuesday failed to pass legislation to approve the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry oil from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. The final vote tally was 59-41, one shy of the 60-vote threshold the measure needed to advance.
Landrieu, a Louisiana Democrat who who faces a runoff election in her state next month, had pushed hard for the vote in hopes that it would boost her re-election bid. But she ultimately was unable to gather enough votes. Landrieu’s opponent in the runoff, Rep. Bill Cassidy, sponsored the House version of the bill, which passed on Nov. 14.
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Just after the bill was declared defeated, a Native American protester in the gallery began chanting before being quickly removed by security. Moments later, four younger demonstrators stood to chant that Senate Democrats should reject the pipeline.
Environmentalists, who have fought the pipeline tooth and nail for years, were quick to declare victory. “We thank all the senators who voted against this dangerous Keystone legislation, and we’re more confident than ever that this pipeline will never be built,” League of Conservation Voters senior vice president of government affairs Tiernan Sittenfeld said in a statement.
The pipeline has been tied up in a review process in the Obama administration, but Republicans and some Democrats have tried to force the president’s hand in approving construction of the project. “Once again, Congress tried to play games with our future — and failed. Since Keystone XL has always been President Obama’s decision, this vote was never anything more than an empty gesture of political theater,” said May Boeve, the executive director of 350.org, the environmentalist group that helped first turn the pipeline into a major issue.
But the victory for the environmentalists may be short-lived, as the Republican-controlled Congress that will be sworn in next year is expected to quickly and easily approve the plan. “I have no real doubt that the president will veto it eventually,” Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn told reporters earlier Tuesday. “So we will come back at it next year and keep coming back until we get a solution.”








