Image: The BP oil spill as captured by a NASA satellite
Given their rhetoric and their policy positions, the majority of Republicans don’t appear to grasp that a robust economy and the availability of energy are both depended on the availability of natural resources and on a human environment that’s not polluted and stressed.
Last week, Texas Republican Joe Barton illustrated the obtuseness and insensitiveness of Republicans when it comes to environmental disasters and the subsequent loss of livelihoods. Barton “apologized to BP CEO Tony Hayward Thursday for what he termed a ‘$20 billion shakedown’ of BP by the White House.” Vice President Joe Biden summarizes:
Newt Gingrich, another Republicans, apparently agrees with Joe Barton. Gingrich characterizes the creation of the $20-billion escrow fund as President Obama “extorting money from a company.”
Nevertheless, Barton’s unreasonable remarks were a blessing for the Democrats and President Obama. More from Chris Cillizza:
Barton, a Texas congressman and the highest-ranking Republican on the Energy and Commerce Committee, decided to apologize to — wait for it — BP chief executive Tony “I’d like my life back” Hayward during a hearing Thursday morning.
“I’m ashamed of what happened in the White House yesterday,” Barton told Hayward, condemning a $20 billion account funded by BP to help pay damages from the spill and calling it a “shakedown” of the company by the Obama administration.
. . .
Whatever his reasons, condemnation rained down on Barton as Democrats pointed to him as the symbol of Republicans’ deep ties to the oil industry, and even House GOP leaders such as John Boehner and Eric Cantor averted their eyes and shuffled away from the looming PR disaster.
Barton’s apology to BP — for which he quickly issued a too-little-too-late apology and retraction Thursday afternoon — allowed the White House to reclaim the high ground in the political fight over the oil spill. For sympathizing with the wrong guy, Joe Barton, you had the Worst Week in Washington. Congrats, or something.
It’s no surprise that Republican Michele Bachmann has characterized the fund as a “redistribution-of-wealth fund.” From the Minnesota Independent:
In her address to the group, Bachmann attacked the White House proposal for BP to arrange a $20 billion escrow account to pay for damages from the oil spill . . .
Bachmann had some words of advice for Obama, as well: Don’t demonize BP. The Washington Post’s Dave Weigel caught up with Bachmann after the event, and confirmed that she is in favor of lifting the liability cap against BP. But the congresswoman then went on to defend BP against too much criticism from the administration . . .
























































