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A Time To Drill
Published: July 17, 2008 07:20

In a remarkably short time, the public has changed from supporters of environmentalism to advocates of drilling for oil and natural gas in the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge (called ANWR) or in the ocean. For the first time since the 70s, liberals in both parties have found themselves responding to significant demands for drilling. Their responses are meant to confuse the electorate in order to turn public opinion back to their position on the environment.

Toward that end, liberals have come up with two mantras that we hear on every talk show, in every press conference and in every speech addressing the high cost of gasoline. The first mantra is that it will take at least 10, maybe 30 years before we see a drop of oil coming from the ground at the aforementioned sites. The second mantra is that greedy oil companies already have 86 million acres of leases provided by the federal government. They only want more leases to satisfy their greed.

On the first point, correspondent Ken Wood pointed out that Larry Kudlow recently featured on his television show James T. Hackett, president and CEO of Anadarko Petroleum Company. Whereas some liberals are saying it could take 30 years for the oil to be available, Hackett said it would take two or three years, depending upon where the oil was drilled.

On the second point, Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe, who used to be in the oil business, said the reason oil companies are not drilling on the 86 million acres is that there is no substantial oil available on those lands to make drilling economically viable. He said the government only permits exploration on those leased lands, so oil companies have explored them and found that they would produce little.

Neither liberal argument can be sustained if pro-drilling forces launch a campaign to educate the public. Thus far, they have done an inadequate job explaining the real answers to these leftist fallacies.

That being the case, pro-drilling members of the House and Senate should issue special orders on the chamber floors. They would be seen on prime time television and possibly would be picked up by the mainstream networks. They should hold daily press conferences. They should appear on national talk shows and talk radio every day. Each senator should appear on local talk radio and each House member should do the same with talk radio in his or her district. They should arrange for editorial board meetings with national and local newspapers. They should organize volunteers to go door-to-door to ensure that everyone knows each side of the issue and which position would be best for the American economy and American consumers.

Given the opinion of the electorate and her own contrary ideological position, it is no wonder Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has pulled measures lifting the ban on drilling from the House calendar. My understanding is that the Democratic Majority Whip’s count demonstrated that the pro-drilling forces had enough votes to lift the ban. That would be a terrible embarrassment to the anti-drilling forces and the environmentalists.

Since the House and Senate leadership do not want to help Americans, pro-drilling representatives and senators should initiate discharge petitions. Maybe, just maybe, a majority of legislators would be willing to ignore the majority leadership. If they can force a vote and pass pro-drilling legislation, President George W. Bush will sign it into law. If the anti-drilling forces triumph in the 2008 elections, which seems likely, it may be too late; for another generation will be forced to use less oil and gas because of the high cost.

We will be voting to make ourselves miserable and poorer unless we act now.

Paul M. Weyrich is chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Foundation.