Final vote on energy package. The bill passes 235-181. The Senate vote is scheduled for Saturday.
Democrats against:
- Barrow
- Boren
- Boyd (FL)
- Gene Green
- Lampson
- Marshall
- Melancon
Republicans in favor:
- Bono
- Castle
- Gerlach
- Hayes
- Johnson (IL)
- Kirk
- LaHood
- LoBiondo
- Ramstad
- Reichert
- Ros-Lehtinen
- Shays
- Smith (NJ)
- Walden (OR)
Videos from the Speaker’s blog:
Speaker Pelosi: “Earlier today, some of you saw me reference this baseball, signed by Bobby Thompson, the ‘shot heard around the world,’ October 3, 1951. An historic day in baseball. When he signed this baseball, he referenced a phrase used by Ralph Waldo Emerson referencing the shot fired at Concord which began the Revolutionary War, the fight for American independence. If Bobby Thompson could reference a shot heard round the world, we should indeed be able to do it today. This vote on this legislation will be a shot heard ‘round the world for energy independence for America.’” |
Rep. Peter Welch (VT-AL) opens debate on the rule:
Rep.
Welch: “Perhaps the best way to characterize what has been the
US policy on energy is captured by looking at a photograph that serves
as a metaphor. What it shows is the United States hand in hand with
OPEC producers on whom we’ve become
increasingly reliant and dependent, pursuing an energy policy of drill
and drill, consume and consume, spend and spend, all with
ever-escalating and budget-busting expense inflicted on our families and
businesses, all with reckless denial – reckless denial – to the
environmental damage that we are doing by this policy to the earth we
all share, all with cavalier disregard to our national security by
depending on regimes that are not our friends. Mr. Speaker, this bill
brought before you does two fundamental things in changing the direction
of energy policy…” |
Rep. Ed Markey (MA-07), Chairman of the Select Committee for Energy Independence and Global Warming, speaks in favor:
Rep.
Markey: “This is an historic debate. This is an historic day in
the history of the United States. Today we debate energy independence
and global warming for the first time in a serious way in our history.
This legislation will accomplish things that will send a signal to the
world. In this bill we will increase the fuel economy standards of the
vehicles Americans drive from 25 miles per gallon to 35 miles per
gallon. We will produce enough ethanol and cellulosic fuel that we can
substitute for oil that by the year 2030 when both provisions are
completely implemented we will be backing out twice the oil that we
import on a daily basis from OPEC, from the
Persian Gulf. What a signal to OPEC. Twice the
oil from the Persian Gulf eliminated in one vote.” |
Rep. George Miller (CA-07), Chairman of the Education and Labor Committee, speaks in favor:
Rep.
Miller: “This bill also creates over three million jobs in the
green industry that are supported by this legislation, that encourages
that investment in wind and biofuels, in solar energy. Those three
million jobs, we’re eight years late coming to those jobs, but they’re
in this legislation, and those jobs will be created in almost every
sector of the economy, no matter what geographical area people live in,
but we need to develop those skills. And I want to thank John Tierney
and Hilda Solis for their efforts on that. This is what… where they told
us to go to generate the next generation of innovation, of technology,
was in energy and that’s where we’re going to go and America’s going to
have a much better energy future as a result of this legislation.” |
Rep. Henry Waxman (CA-30), Chairman of the Oversight Committee, speaks in favor:
Rep.
Waxman: “And there are some things this legislation will not
do. It won’t diminish the EPA’s authority to
address global warming, which the Supreme Court has recognized. It won’t
seize authority from the states to act on global warming. President Bush
has threatened to veto this bill because it takes away taxpayers
subsidies to oil companies, and supports new renewable energy
technologies. It’s time for the President to do what the American people
want, not what the oil companies want.” |
Rep. John Dingell (MI-15), Chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, speaks in favor:
Rep.
Dingell: “I will be voting for this legislation because it
contains a number of significant landmark achievements. It will raise
fuel economy standards by 40%, to 35 miles per gallon. And it will do it
in a way which achieves and protects American jobs, and it gives
manufacturers proper flexibility in achieving our goals.” |
Rep. Nydia Velázquez (NY-12), Chairwoman of the Small Business Committee, speaks in favor:
Rep.
Velázquez: “Small businesses are not just the most impacted by
high energy costs, but small businesses are also leaders in domestic
production of energy. They make up 80% of all renewable fuel producers
in this country. This legislation makes them part of the solution. It
does this by developing innovative new technologies, reduces carbon
emission, increases clean renewable energy production, and modernizes
our energy infrastructure.” |