John BoehnerPhoto: GOP.gov

Cross-posted from the Wonk Room.

House Republicans just released “A Pledge to America” [PDF] — their agenda for the 112th Congress if they take charge. The Republicans claim that their document — written by former Exxon lobbyist Brian Wild — is “one in which the people have the most say and the best ideas trump the most entrenched interests.” When it comes to energy policy, the GOP leaders actually ignore public opinion, ignore science, and instead promote the same old ideas [pushed] by big oil lobbyists and other energy interests. The entire Republican energy policy is a single sentence:

We will fight to increase access to domestic energy sources and oppose attempts to impose a national “cap-and-trade” energy tax.

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“Increase access to domestic energy sources” is code for “drill, baby, drill.” This language is straight out of big oil’s playbook, used for years by the oil industry’s lobbying groups:

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  • “[I]ncreasing access to domestic energy is critical to our nation’s security, economic growth, and quality of life.” — American Petroleum Institute, 2010
  • “It’s time for the president to let the market access dependable, affordable and abundant domestic energy.” — Tim Phillips, President of the Americans for Prosperity, 2009
  • “This multifaceted bill includes the building blocks of sound energy policy — efficiency, conservation, diversity, and expanded access to domestic energy supplies.” — Jack Gerard, American Chemistry Council, 2008
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  • “Increasing access to domestic resources will mean more jobs, more revenues to help cash-strapped local, state and federal governments and greater energy security.” — American Petroleum Institute, 2009
  • “The President again urges Congress to pass legislation that opens access to domestic energy sources such as the Outer Continental Shelf and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.” — press release from the Bush White House, 2007
  • “We need to increase access to domestic energy sources.” — John Engler, President of the National Association of Manufacturers, 2007
  • “Congress need[s] to increase access to domestic energy sources… [to] significantly increase domestic oil and natural gas production.” — Competitive Enterprise Institute, 2006

The GOP support for more offshore oil drilling after the BP Gulf of Mexico disaster exposed its deadly risks contradicts, rather than reflects, public opinion. A recent survey by the Pew Research Center found that a majority of Americans opposes more offshore oil drilling.

The second measure in the Pledge’s skimpy energy policy is to “oppose attempts to impose a national ‘cap-and-trade’ energy tax” — Newt Gingrich’s language for a system to reduce global warming pollution from the largest power plants and other industrial sources. Here again the GOP leaders flout, rather than adhere to, public opinion. A myriad of opinion polls demonstrate strong support for global warming pollution reductions:

Another part of the GOP pledge — really just an extended attack on President Obama’s plan to restore the American economy — also rejects public opinion to score political points with oil, coal, and other dirty fuel sources by halting clean energy investments made under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act:

Congress should move immediately to cancel unspent ‘stimulus’ funds, and block any attempts to extend the timeline for spending ‘stimulus’ funds.

Many of these Recovery Act funds are in the form of tax incentives to small- and medium-sized companies to build wind farms and solar energy systems, and to assist manufacturing firms that build clean energy equipment. An American Wind Energy Association analysis found that in 2009, the “U.S. wind industry broke all previous records by installing close to 10,000 megawatts of new generating capacity in 2009 thanks to Recovery Act incentives.” These popular and effective Recovery Act incentives “spurred the growth of construction, operations and management jobs,” helping the clean-energy industry “shine as a bright spot in the economy.”

Not surprisingly, the public overwhelmingly favors these clean-energy investments the Republicans want to kill. Eighty-four percent of Americans support “tax breaks to produce more electricity from water, wind, and solar power,” according to a recent Stanford University poll.

Rather than listening to the American people, the pledge listens to polluter lobbyists. The GOP leaders want to expand offshore oil drilling rather than reduce greenhouse gas pollution. They want to abandon clean energy jobs when they are most needed. The pledge is nothing more than an oath of allegiance to big oil, dirty coal, and other special interests. Fulfillment of the pledge would leave the United States with fewer jobs and more pollution.