President Obama was right to veto a bill that would have forced approval of the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline — and the Senate was right to vote Wednesday to let the veto stand.
That bill was not in our national interest: it was political payback to big oil.
The fossil fuel industry spent more than $720 million, over just the past two years, to prop up its big polluter agenda and allies in Congress.
Looks like they got what they paid for. The Republican leadership made sure the dirty tar sands pipeline was the very first order of business for the 114th Congress.
That’s not in our national interest either: it’s a national disgrace.
We elect our Congress to stand up for the people — not the biggest polluters on the planet.
Congress isn’t a permitting agency. And, in any event, projects like this pipeline are the president’s call. At least, that’s how it’s been since President Lyndon Johnson set the policy in place 47 years ago.
Why? Because our Constitution created the presidency to represent all the American people, not just a collection of states or districts, not any single political party, and certainly not the oil industry.
From the day this pipeline was first proposed, it’s presented Obama with a single question: is it in the national interest?
It’s not. Now it’s time to stand and say so, time to reject the dirty tar sands pipeline once and for all.
Fact: From ground to tailpipe, tar sands oil kicks out 17% more of the carbon pollution that’s driving climate change than conventional oil. That’s not my number. It comes straight out of the U.S. State Department’s assessment (see page 15).
Fact: After the two years it takes to build the pipeline, the 2,000 jobs that would require would be gone forever, leaving behind just 35 U.S. jobs (page 20), about half what it takes to run a burger joint. Those aren’t my numbers either. They come straight from the company that wants to build the pipeline.
Fact: The tar sands pipeline would cross more than 1,000 American waterways (page 21), tens of thousands of acres of wetlands and run near more than 2,500 wells our ranchers, farmers and communities depend on for clean irrigation and drinking water. And that’s just in the three states — Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska — where the new construction would take place.
That’s all in the State Department report too.
Think pipelines are safe? We’ve had some 5,600 pipeline blowouts or spills over just the past two decades. They’ve dumped well over 100 million gallons of toxic oil, fuels and other pollutants into our rivers, lakes, fields and streams, and most of it has never been cleaned up.









