Friday, March 29

Manchin Blames ‘Revenge Politics’ for GOP Balking on Energy Bill


Senator Joe Manchin pleaded for Republican support to help pass his plan to fast-track energy permitting projects Tuesday as the prospects for his legislation falter amid pushback from the GOP lawmakers and progressive Democrats.

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(Bloomberg) — Senator Joe Manchin pleaded for Republican support to help pass his plan to fast-track energy permitting projects Tuesday as the prospects for his legislation falter amid pushback from the GOP lawmakers and progressive Democrats.

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The legislation, which Manchin said would be released Wednesday, is slated for inclusion on the must-pass stopgap funding legislation. But the West Virginia Democrat said Republicans are opposing legislation they would typically support as political payback for his pivotal vote on Democrats’ climate and spending legislation.

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“It’s like revenge politics,” Manchin said during a Capitol Hill news conference. “This is not about me.”

Manchin has estimated he needs as many as 20 Republicans in the Senate to overcome Democratic defects on his permitting overhaul plan, which could speed approval of Equitrans Midstream Corp.’s stalled $6.6 billion Mountain Valley natural gas pipeline as well as stream-line the federal approval process for clean energy and fossil fuel projects alike.

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Manchin has been for days making the case Republicans won’t get another chance to achieve the permitting reform they, and their supporters in the energy industry, have sought for years.

Read: Manchin Plan to Fast-Track Energy Projects Headed for Showdown

But Republicans have balked at supporting a bill they have yet to see. A Republican version of the bill, introduced by Manchin’s West Virginia colleague, GOP Senator Shelley Moore Capito, has the backing of 46 other Republicans, potentially sapping the party’s support for Manchin’s measure .

Manchin on Tuesday said the plan was still to attach his bill to the government funding legislation, which was the product of a deal between Manchin, Democratic leadership and the White House in return for his vote on the earlier climate package. The White House has been “extremely” supportive of his bill as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Manchin said.

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But passage is far from certain given pushback from both Republicans and progressive Democrats who see the legislation as an environmental betrayal, lining up a showdown that could force a government shutdown Oct. 1.

“If they are going to say we are going to vote to shut down the government because of a personal attack on me we are basically not looking at the good of the country,” Manchin said.

In addition to opposition from more than 70 House Democrats, Green New Deal author Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts said last week he doesn’t support attaching Manchin’s permitting bill to must-pass government spending legislation. Senator Bernie Sanders has said he’d vote against the stopgap government funding bill if Democratic leaders added it.

The Senate is not expected to take up the government funding legislation until the middle of next week, just ahead of an Oct. 1 shutdown deadline.

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financialpost.com