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Obama’s Energy Secretary Gives Himself An “A” on Gas Prices
by Mike
Brownfield
March 27, 2012
Gas prices
have hit $3.87 per gallon, the highest ever recorded in March and 30
cents
higher than a year ago, but Secretary of Energy Steven Chu thinks he
has done
an outstanding job at working to keep prices down.
In
congressional testimony yesterday, Representative Darrell Issa (R-CA),
chairman
of the House committee on Oversight and Government Reform, asked Chu if
he
would give himself an “A minus” on “controlling the cost of gasoline at
the
pump.”
Chu’s reply
(which you can watch above): “The tools we have at our disposal are
limited,
but I would I say I would give myself a little higher in that since I
became
Secretary of Energy, I’ve been doing everything I can to get long-term
solutions.”
Keep in
mind that Chu has been an advocate for higher gas prices. In 2008, he
stated,
“Somehow we have to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to
the levels
in Europe” (which are routinely above $8 per gallon). And earlier this
year,
when asked whether it’s his goal to lower gas prices, Chu said, “No,
the
overall goal is to decrease our dependency on oil, to build and
strengthen our
economy.”
Though Chu
says he’s been doing everything he can to get long term solutions, the
facts
tell a different story. When it comes to lowering the cost of energy,
the Obama
Administration has turned its back on domestic energy production,
including
withdrawing areas offered for 77 oil and gas leases in Utah, canceling
lease
sales in the Western Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic coast, delaying
exploration off the coast of Alaska, keeping other resource-rich areas
off
limits, finalizing rules that establish more hurdles to onshore oil and
natural
gas production on federal lands, and withdrawing 61 oil and natural gas
leases
in Montana as part of a lawsuit settlement over climate change.
See the
video at Mail Magazine 24
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