Grassley: ‘Two or Three Other’ Republicans Open to Climate Change Deal

The Senate’s propensity for filibusters, delay, and fruitless attempts at bipartisan deal-making is earning it quite the reputation these days. And climate change legislation, with its big-ticket implications for transit and urban development in general, is becoming increasingly caught up in the Senate’s peripatetic politics.

t1home.grassley.gi.jpgSen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) (Photo: CNN)

The
Finance Committee held a hearing today on the job-creating implications
of its climate bill, which would set aside hundreds of millions of
dollars for annual clean transportation grants. Neither the transit
industry nor the renewable energy sector was invited to testify,
although two oil industry-backed witnesses were brought in to criticize the measure.

During
the hearing, Finance chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) sounded hopeful notes
about the need to address carbon emissions. "We should recognize that
in the case of [regulating] acid rain, the
negative consequences were far less than projected," Baucus said. "We
should keep this
in mind when similar claims are made about the effects of legislation
to
address climate change."

And on a conference call with
reporters today, the Finance panel’s senior Republican, Chuck Grassley
(IA), gave a reluctant but upbeat assessment of GOP senators’ openness
to a bipartisan climate deal:

Well, we have one, Lindsey Graham, working with [Sen. John] Kerry [D-MA] on some sort
of a compromise — if it would include nuclear and would include
offshore drilling. I don’t know whether that’s good enough to offset
the bad that’s in the bill or not. I don’t think it’s good enough for
me. But you’ll at least him working there. And I wouldn’t want to say that there’s not two or three other senators.

Two
or three Republicans is not a lot, to be sure. But the climate bill
will need all the votes it can muster to surmount a Senate that’s dominated by smaller, rural states — such as Baucus’ and Grassley’s.

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

Today’s Headlines

|
Pasadena Reviewing Fate Of Canceled 710 Freeway Housing (Pasadena Now) South L.A. Community Plan Update Aims To Shift Development To Commercial Corridors (Urbanize) California Ends Parking Mandates At Transit-Rich Locations (LAT) Southeast L.A. Toxic Tours Teach About Pollution And Resistance (LAist) 8 Places To Bike In Southern California (LAT) …9 Groups To Bike So Cal […]

Today’s Headlines

|
More On October 7 K/Crenshaw Line Opening (The Source, LAT, Daily News) United To House L.A. Could Fund Housing Needs (L.A. Taco) County Ends Mask Mandate On Transit (LAT) Metro Approves Motion To Advance Bus/BRT/Rail On Vermont (Daily News) Advisory Commission Approves Pasadena Ped Plan (Pasadena Now) Metrolink Train Stalled Due To Wire Theft (Daily […]