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Climate vote threatens Dems' careers
Politico ^ | 07/03/09 | Patrick O'Connor

Posted on 07/03/2009 11:26:19 AM PDT by freespirited

ALTON, Va. — Rep. Thomas Perriello relishes an energy fight with Republicans — even here in the rural Southside.

The freshman lawmaker understands the potential consequences that he and other vulnerable Democrats face for backing a sweeping climate-change bill, and rather than ducking the issue, he’s embracing what may have been the toughest vote of his young political career.

“There’s got to be something more important than getting reelected,” Perriello said in an interview with POLITICO. “If I lose my seat, and that’s the worst that happens, I could live with that.”

But the 34-year-old believes Democrats will win this fight.

“This is a gift,” Perriello said of the vote. “For the first time in a generation, we have the chance to redefine our energy economy. …This is a great moment for us.”

It’s unclear whether voters in this part of Virginia, where tobacco farms are shrinking, textile mills have shut down and unemployment remains well above the national average, will embrace Perriello’s optimism about green jobs and cap and trade. Like many Democrats from Republican-leaning districts, Perriello is back home this week defending what may be a game-changing vote with consequences for 2010.

Perriello is one of the top targets in a national barrage of attack ads by the National Republican Congressional Committee, which has paid for a rare off-year television ad campaign against Perriello and launched radio ads and automated phone calls against a handful of his fellow Democrats.

But Republican confidence may be a little premature.

“This is an issue that is very dependent on the overall state of the economy,” said Larry Sabato, who runs The Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, in an e-mail. “If the economy continues to be bad through 2010, then voters are more likely to give credence to the GOP charges.”

However, “if the economy improves,” Sabato continued, “voters won’t find the attacks credible. Really, how is anybody — even a professional economist — to know exactly what the effect of this bill will be? It’s so entangled with the rest of the economy.”

Indeed, the legislation doesn’t even have a direct impact on the barometer most Americans use to gauge the cost of energy — the price of gasoline.

“What’s going to increase the price of energy more?” asks E. Linwood Wright, an economic development consultant with the city of Danville, Va., in Perriello’s district. “The things in this bill? Or crude oil going back to $150-a-barrel?”

In the meantime, the fight will be about jobs, jobs, jobs.

Republicans claim passage of the Clean Energy act will result in millions of jobs moving overseas to countries with much less stringent environmental standards, countries like China and India. On the flip side, Democrats will offer rosy — and well-worn — projections that its passage will usher in a new era of prosperity in which millions of so-called green jobs are created.

Of course, neither outcome is a certainty, leaving plenty of room for political posturing.

The NRCC target list included some of the most vulnerable Democrats, like Florida Rep. Alan Grayson, Colorado Rep. Betsy Markey and Ohio Reps. John Boccieri, Mary Jo Kilroy and Zack Space. But the campaign committee also went after senior Democrats, like Virginia Rep. Rick Boucher — who negotiated large portions of the bill — Science Committee Chairman Bart Gordon of Tennessee and Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike Skelton of Missouri.

But outside groups are coming to the defense of key Democrats, trying to protect supporters of the bill, including some of the eight Republicans who voted for it.

The Environmental Defense Action Fund went up with television ads this week thanking Perriello and a handful of other Democrats for backing the bill. The list includes Kilroy, Frank Kratovil Jr. of Maryland and Dan Maffei of New York. The group even ran ads thanking Republicans Dave Reichert of Washington and Leonard Lance of New Jersey. And some of the spots will run for two weeks.

In addition, the White House will send the president and his cabinet secretaries out on the road to stump for fellow Democrats, bolstering them where they need it. The secretaries of energy and agriculture will both make trips to Perriello’s district to meet with his constituents, the congressman said Friday.

So Perriello, who ousted longtime Republican Rep. Virgil Goode last year by a mere 727 votes, is working to get ahead of a potential problem 18 months before voters head to the polls.

In a barn in the middle of the VIRginia International Raceway, Perriello told a collection of elected officials and local business leaders: “There are two types of communities: There are communities that are looking backwards and communities that are looking forward.”

Textile mills and tobacco farms once thrived in Virginia’s “Southside,” near the North Carolina border. But the mills have been closing for decades, and the region produces 30 percent less tobacco now than it did just a few years ago, according to John Kennedy, the director of the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research, a program run under the umbrella of Virginia Tech University.

“If we can create an industry that produces ethanol and other fuels, we can utilize all this land,” Kennedy said.

The district still has plenty of agriculture and timber, and some local farmers worry the cost of this new economy will put them out of business.

And if Perriello is going to defend his vote on the climate change bill, he’ll need to explain it to folks like Carl Tinder.

“I don’t know what this means for me,” said Tinder, a small farmer who also manages a cattle farm in the northern part of the district. “It’s definitely a step in the direction I’m a little hesitant about.”

Community leaders are pooling their resources in a bid to collect grant money wherever they can in the hopes of spurring bio-fuel production or any other manufacturing jobs. At this stage, they are focused on job training.

“Employers need a trained workforce,” said Laurie Moran, president of the Danville Pittsylvania Chamber of Commerce, who has helped organize a local cooperative of government officials and business leaders to help amass public and private grant money.

“We need to support legislation that will support second generation bio-fuels,” Perriello said. “The government isn’t going to create the jobs. But it can give business the incentive to invest.”

The crowd in Alton responded well to Perriello, offering him a standing ovation before he delivered his brief remarks. But as the new congressman mingled after the speech, one attendee leaned over to another and whispered, “He cast the wrong vote.”

But after he finished, elected officials and business owners alike approached him about the prospects — or progress — of various grants and earmarks they were trying to secure through the $787 billion stimulus or through the regular appropriations process.

Republicans are hoping to undercut Perriello before he and his office get more firmly established in the region.

“Tom Perriello’s national energy tax vote was the defining moment of his short career,” NRCC spokesman Andy Sere said, adding that voters in his district who once thought of him as “that nice young man … is actually a smug globalist who cares more about his Daily Kos cred than the farmers, laborers and middle-class families in his district.”

One Roanoke station refused the run the campaign committee’s ad — which portrays Perriello as a tool of President Barack Obama and Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). But the Lynchburg, Va,, News and Advance ran a story on the front-page Friday — opposite another headline about the community receiving $700,000 in stimulus money.

Perriello complains that these attacks are just more of the same “old politics” that helped Republicans squander the White House and their majorities on Capitol Hill.

“The Republicans may win some seats because of this vote, but they can’t regain their souls for demagoguing the issue,” Perriello said.

As a candidate, Perriello broke the mold in ways, by taking Democratic stands in a decidedly Republican district. He seems to have retained that confidence coming out of the election and wants to help Obama be bold — even in south central Virginia.

“People are sick of cowardice,” Perriello said. “It’s not the easy votes, it’s the hard votes.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: 111th; climatechangebill; perriello; tomperriello; va2010; virgilgoode; waxmanmarkey
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Amazing. Perriello beat Virgil Goode by less than 1000 votes, thanks to ACORN and Obama. It's difficult to believe that his constituents are on the same page as he is on globull warming, save for an annoying minority who reside in the People's Republic of Charlottesville.

This could cost him his seat. He's dumber than I realized.

1 posted on 07/03/2009 11:26:19 AM PDT by freespirited
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To: Corin Stormhands

Pingaroo


2 posted on 07/03/2009 11:27:39 AM PDT by freespirited (Is this a nation of laws or a nation of Democrats? -- Charles Krauthammer)
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To: freespirited
“People are sick of cowardice,” Perriello said

People are sick of politicians and the LSM lying about globull warming.

3 posted on 07/03/2009 11:31:54 AM PDT by Need4Truth (Washington DC is a foreign entity.)
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To: freespirited

“This is a gift,” Perriello said of the vote. “For the first time in a generation, we have the chance to redefine our energy economy. …This is a great moment for us.”

The only problem is this guy nor anyone else has anything to back it up with. What a tragedy.


4 posted on 07/03/2009 11:32:05 AM PDT by freekitty (Give me back my conservative vote.)
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To: freespirited

They all get voted out over this and the next Congress overturns it, How is that a win?


5 posted on 07/03/2009 11:33:14 AM PDT by chris_bdba
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To: freespirited
For the first time in a generation, we have the chance to redefine destroy our energy economy.

There, fixed it.

6 posted on 07/03/2009 11:33:37 AM PDT by tx_eggman (Clinton was our first black President ... Obama is our first French President.)
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To: freespirited
"This is a great moment for us.”

But a lousy "moment" for the people of the United States. Especially those of us who realize that the Marxist 'RATS are hosing us with their "global warming" scam.

7 posted on 07/03/2009 11:33:48 AM PDT by FlingWingFlyer (Hey America! How's that "hope and change" thing working out?)
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To: freespirited
"Bureaucrats Will Carry Out Mandatory Home Inspections Under Climate Bill" How many letters like this, to congress, will it take to get the message through? “You keep your fricking Gestapo climate Nazis away from my house! And if you think you're going to fine me for the privilege, wait until you see how much I spend to kick your Fascist butt out of office!”
8 posted on 07/03/2009 11:34:31 AM PDT by G Larry (ObamaCare = "DYING IN LINE!")
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To: freespirited

The vote in favor of cap-and-trade will only hurt Perriello if the bill is actually signed into law.

It was probably a smart move for him to maintain his pandering to the left wing by voting “aye”- if he is certain that the Senate is going to shoot it down.


9 posted on 07/03/2009 11:35:28 AM PDT by I_Like_Spam
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To: freespirited

True scientific evidence counter to man made climate change is OVERWHELMING. We need to be yelling this FACT to all GW/GCC proponents and the media.


10 posted on 07/03/2009 11:37:34 AM PDT by charmedone
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To: freespirited

“This is an issue that is very dependent on the overall state of the economy,” said Larry Sabato, who runs The Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, in an e-mail. “If the economy continues to be bad through 2010, then voters are more likely to give credence to the GOP charges.”

Even Dems admit that unemployment will continue to get worse into next year estimating 10.7%. I think it will be quite a bit worse since they’re not doing anything to revive the economy.


11 posted on 07/03/2009 11:37:52 AM PDT by saganite (What would Sully do?)
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To: freespirited
“This is a gift,” Perriello said of the vote. “For the first time in a generation, we have the chance to redefine our energy economy. …This is a great moment for us.”

Stalin and Lenin would have been proud to have made these remarks. This new Democrat Party is going to put the Communists, Marxists, Progressives, Liberals, Fascists, and Socialists all to shame.

12 posted on 07/03/2009 11:38:06 AM PDT by centurion316
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To: freespirited

When this Environmental Squirrel goes down, he won’t be alone, and if his Cap and Trash Bill passes the Senate, it can be repealed by the incoming 2010 replacement workers that represent the Majority view.
And the Majority view will not be 52.7%, it will be more like the 64% California average on the recent California vote.


13 posted on 07/03/2009 11:38:23 AM PDT by 4Speed
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To: chris_bdba
They all get voted out over this and the next Congress overturns it, How is that a win?

It feels like a win, to them.

Feelings are their only principles. They don't believe in anything else.

14 posted on 07/03/2009 11:38:46 AM PDT by Steely Tom (RKBA: last line of defense against vote fraud)
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To: freespirited

He has to be pretty dumb to believe that congress can pass a law to control the activities of the sun. Perriello is definitely from the left side of the Bell Curve!


15 posted on 07/03/2009 11:39:22 AM PDT by abclily
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To: freespirited
On the flip side, Democrats will offer rosy — and well-worn — projections that its passage will usher in a new era of prosperity in which millions of so-called green jobs are created.

According to the Donkey logic, I propose this bill that will create jobs. I create a window smashing bureaucracy that will drive by your house and break you house and car windows every so often. That way we create millions of new jobs in the glass manufacturing and installation industry.

16 posted on 07/03/2009 11:41:41 AM PDT by C19fan
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To: freespirited
Like many Democrats from Republican-leaning districts, Perriello is back home this week defending what may be a game-changing vote with consequences for 2010.

So true. And this is why it was so important for the Republicans to stand together on this issue. The Turncoat Eight Republicans saved Pelosi from having to designate an eight additional Dems to vote YES instead of the safer NO on this piece of crap legislation. That means those Dems have a better chance of getting re-elected than they would have if Bono, Kirk and the rest would have turned down that Green Environmental Wacko money and voted the way their constituents would want them to. Instead we will have eight more vulnerable Republicans. What dopes they are.

17 posted on 07/03/2009 11:42:26 AM PDT by InterceptPoint
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To: freespirited

Plenty of Repubs lost seats due to the Obama wave. When people see that nothing really improved with him taking office there is going to be a reverse reaction.

Just take over he House or get the Senate back over 41 seats that the leadership can hold onto and the Obama agenda is dead.


18 posted on 07/03/2009 11:42:43 AM PDT by misterrob (A society that burdens future generations with debt can not be considered moral or just)
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To: freespirited
he's dumber than I realized

Vast understatement! Anyone that votes for this bill is either a dem/rat clingon, Socialist or brain dead hack.

19 posted on 07/03/2009 11:43:51 AM PDT by rodguy911 (HOME OF THE FREE BECAUSE OF THE BRAVE--GO SARAHCUDA !!)
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To: freespirited
In the meantime, the fight will be about jobs, jobs, jobs.

I heard you the first time, first time, first time.

20 posted on 07/03/2009 11:44:19 AM PDT by HIDEK6
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