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Speaker Scalise? Oil industry says 'yes, please.'

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Oct 12, 2023 View in browser
 

By Arianna Skibell

Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) arrives to speak with reporters after he was nominated by House Republicans to be speaker of the House on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

Steve Scalise’s path to House speaker is far from a done deal.

But what’s far more certain is that the Louisiana Republican, who now serves as majority leader, would be good news for the oil and gas industry should he take the gavel, write Kelsey Brugger and Emma Dumain.

Scalise, who routinely casts doubt on the science of Climate change, is one of the House’s most prominent fossil fuel defenders and the industry’s top choice to fill ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s shoes, observers told Kelsey and Emma.

In a closed-door, conferencewide vote Wednesday, Scalise narrowly secured the GOP nomination, edging out his chief rival, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, by 113-99. That, however, is far from the 217 votes he needs to secure the speakership in a vote on the House floor.

Friend to oil and gas
Scalise, who hosts an annual trip to an oil rig in his district, leads the House Energy Action Team, a messaging arm for leadership.

GOP Rep. Jodey Arrington of Texas affirmed that “energy independence” is a “personal conviction” for Scalise, who hails from one of the country’s top oil- and gas-producing states.

Under McCarthy, House Republicans passed H.R. 1, a sweeping energy package that would require the federal government to hold more oil lease sales and make it easier to build oil and gas infrastructure. Arrington predicted Scalise would take the GOP energy agenda even further as Congress works to pass spending bills over the next month.

“I think it’s taking the fight to the Senate — in the funding bills,” he said. “It’s taking the fight to the fourth branch of government, which is the regulatory state that we’ve created in this country.”

Scalise has secured the endorsement of the American Energy Alliance, a fossil-fuel-friendly group.

Green groups also took note.

“By nominating Scalise, the GOP underscored its commitment to propping up the oil and gas industry,” said Climate Power’s senior adviser for oil and gas, Alex Witt.

Other environmentalists told POLITICO’s Morning Energy that Scalise probably wouldn’t offer much of a departure from McCarthy’s policies. But Scalise is “much more substantive on the full array of energy issues” than Jordan, who “tends to focus more on the political aspects of energy,” industry lobbyist Frank Maisano said.

Scalise has raked in more than $2 million in campaign funding from the oil and gas industry, the third-highest career total of anyone in Congress, according to OpenSecrets.

 

It's Thursday — thank you for tuning in to POLITICO's Power Switch. I'm your host, Arianna Skibell. Power Switch is brought to you by the journalists behind E&E News and POLITICO Energy. Send your tips, comments, questions to [email protected].

 

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Listen to today’s POLITICO Energy podcast

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Onshore wind turbines are located in Atlantic City, N.J. Wind developer Ørsted is delaying its first offshore wind project in New Jersey by two years. | Wayne Perry/AP

Danish darling in the dumps
Ørsted, a Danish wind developer, was going places. Now, the company's shares are valued at a quarter of what they were since peaking in early 2021, its credit rating was downgraded to negative, and the fate of a number of its projects is uncertain, writes Benjamin Storrow.

Ørsted’s struggles illustrate the wider challenges facing clean energy companies at a time of rising interest rates, fractured supply chains and oil dominance.

Putting a price on climate change
The Biden administration's effort to put a price on climate damage survived legal attack this week, but the battle is far from over, write Lesley Clark and Niina H. Farah.

The Supreme Court declined to take up a Republican-led bid to squash the climate change metric known as the social cost of carbon, which would help the administration write stronger climate rules. But analysts say conservative opponents still have a number of options to pursue.

Chance of a flight ban? Maybe not
France has banned domestic short-haul flights when there is a decent rail alternative, and the idea has gained traction with ministers in Austria, Belgium and Spain in recent years, writes Mari Eccles.

But Ryanair chief Michael O’Leary said on Thursday that customers in most parts of Europe won't turn away from air travel, even if prices go up. "What’s the likelihood of there being some success of banning flying? Fucking zero,” he told reporters at Airlines for Europe’s annual meeting.

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That's it for today, folks! Thanks for reading.

 

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