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Inhofe Exposes Cap and Tax Scheme in Obama Budget
Senate.gov ^ | March 18, 2009 | Senator James M. Inhofe

Posted on 03/21/2009 4:20:14 PM PDT by Delacon

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), Ranking Member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, went to the Senate Floor this morning to expose the cap and trade tax scheme included in President Obama’s budget.  The following are excerpts of his Senate Floor speech:  

“The Administration’s decision to include cap and trade—and the revenues generated by it—in the budget forces my colleagues here in the Senate to no longer hide the ball…  It allows us to have an honest debate about the costs of a program of this magnitude on the American people—not to mention the enormous redistribution of wealth for pet projects and programs under the umbrella of ‘clean energy.’ To put it simply, they are realizing that cap and trade is a regressive energy tax that hits the Midwest and the South harder than the East or West Coasts. 

“In this time of recession and economic pain, the Administration and proponents of mandatory global warming controls now need to be honest with the American people. The purpose of these programs is to ration fossil-based energy by making it more expensive, and therefore less appealing for public consumption. It is a regressive tax that imposes a greater burden (relative to resources) on the poor than on the rich.  That is because the poor spend a larger percentage of their income on energy costs than the rich. 

“There is nothing in it for taxpayers, consumers or the climate.  If it is time for anything, it is time for us to get realistic about these policies, and focus on what is achievable, both globally and domestically, to help bring down energy costs to consumers and make us more energy secure so the American public doesn’t get yet another raw deal. 

“Let us be honest. The total costs of the program will be well over the $646 billion when you factor in the private sector mandates and the total costs to reduce emissions. If past economic models are any indication, the total costs of a program could be 3 times more expensive than what the Administration’s numbers predict. And the Administration’s numbers of just the auction revenues aren’t small, roughly $80 billion per year.”   

Senator Inhofe’s Full Floor Remarks as prepared for delivery:  

CAP AND TAX 

Over the next few weeks we will be debating the merits of an issue that I have spent nearly 10 years debating as a rank and file, former Chairman and now Ranking Member of the Environment and Public Works Committee.  That issue is global warming and a cap and trade program to regulate greenhouse gases. More specifically for today, I want to discuss the inclusion of such a cap and trade proposal in the President’s budget. 

In my view, the President did a good thing by including an estimate of the revenues that will be generated under such a proposal in his budget.  It allows us to have an honest debate about the costs of a program of this magnitude on the American people—not to mention the enormous redistribution of wealth for pet projects and programs under the umbrella of “clean energy.”  In fact, according to a new report from the Center for Public Integrity, the number of lobbyists seeking to influence federal policy on climate change has grown more than 300 percent in five years.  This represents more than 4 lobbyists for every Member of Congress, with a slew of new interests from Main Street to Wall Street clamoring for new taxpayer-funded subsidies.

The Administration’s decision to include cap and trade—and the revenues generated by it—in the budget forces my colleagues here in the Senate to no longer hide the ball.  They can no longer prevent discussion of what a program of this magnitude is or isn’t, and the public is finally beginning to pay attention. To put it simply, they are realizing that cap and trade is a regressive energy tax that hits the Midwest and the South harder than the East or West Coasts. What the public will continue to learn, much to the dismay of my colleagues, is that the high costs of cap and trade can’t be erased with so-called “tax relief,” and cap and trade will have no effect on the climate.  While the numbers of lobbyists and companies are lining up inside the Beltway, outside of Washington businesses and consumers are coming to realize that cap and trade is designed to deliver money and power to the government. There is nothing in it for taxpayers, consumers or the climate. 

Let me further explain. In this time of recession and economic pain, the Administration and proponents of mandatory global warming controls now need to be honest with the American people. The purpose of these programs is to ration fossil-based energy by making it more expensive, and therefore less appealing for public consumption. It is a regressive tax that imposes a greater burden (relative to resources) on the poor than on the rich.  That is because the poor spend a larger percentage of their income on energy costs than the rich.

Need proof? The President’s own Office of Management and Budget Director, Peter Orszag, is on record while at CBO, restating what we know to be true: higher energy costs will impact the poor more than the rich.  “The rise in prices for energy and energy-intensive goods and services would impose a larger burden, relative to income, on low-income households than on high-income households.” (September 2008 testimony before the House Committee on Ways and Means)

Also, Orszag was very clear that taxing carbon consumption will dramatically increase energy costs for consumers. 

Orszag said, “Under a cap-and-trade program, firms would not ultimately bear most of the costs of the allowances but instead would pass them along to their customers in the form of higher prices for products such as electricity and gasoline.”  Orszag is also on record saying, “The higher prices caused by the cap would lower real (inflation-adjusted) wages and real returns on capital, which would be equivalent to raising marginal tax rates on those sources of income.”  (November 2007 testimony to the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Budget on “Approaches to Reducing Carbon Dioxide Emissions”)

The rest of the country outside the Beltway is also beginning to wake up. The Administration should take note.  In the last month alone, there have been a slew of articles detailing how cap and trade is an elaborate system designed to tax and raise energy costs, which, as I noted earlier, disproportionately affect the South and Midwestern States.

  

Wall Street Journal: “Cap and trade, in other words, is a scheme to redistribute income and wealth – but in a very curious way.  It takes from the working class and gives to the affluent; takes from Miami, Ohio and gives to Miami, Florida; and takes from an industrial America that is already struggling and gives to rich Silicon Valley and Wall Street ‘green tech’ investors who know how to leverage the political class.”  (“Who Pays for Cap and Trade?” 3-9-09)

Warren Buffett: “That tax is probably going to be pretty regressive.  If you put a cost of issuing—putting carbon into the atmosphere—in the utility business it’s going to be born by customers.  And it’s a tax like anything else.” (CNBC interview 3-9-09)

Ben Stein:  “Why add another element of uncertainty to energy production, especially if the goal of suppressing carbon-based fuel burning can be accomplished by another means? Energy companies have enough problems as it is — including reduced supplies, political risks and wildly changing prices for raw materials.”  (New York Times, 2-21-09)

CNBC’s Jim Cramer: Obama’s Budget is “pushing an aggressive cap and trade program that could raise the price of energy for millions of people.”  (MainStreet.com 3-5-09)

The Detroit News: “President Barack Obama's proposed cap-and-trade system on greenhouse gas emissions is a giant economic dagger aimed at the nation's heartland -- particularly Michigan. It is a multibillion-dollar tax hike on everything that Michigan does, including making things, driving cars and burning coal.” (3-4-09)

Wall Street Journal: “Not only does cap and trade tax at the point of production (even if some of those costs are ultimately borne by consumers elsewhere), but it also shifts economic activity away from those industries. The states that produce the most emissions are going to see the strongest ancillary declines in income and increases in unemployment. The top carbon states -- in absolute, not per capita, emissions -- include Ohio (No. 3), Pennsylvania (No. 4), Indiana (No. 7) and Michigan (No. 9).”  (3-13-09)

All of these reports reflect the numbers that were released in the President’s proposed budget, which estimated that a cap and trade program would generate $646 billion in federal revenues through 2019. Wait until they discover that the costs of such a program will actually be much higher. In fact, the budget document itself suggests that this does not represent the full amount and that additional revenues may flow to the Treasury.  The Budget contains Footnote 5, which reads: “Shown here are those proceeds from auction emission allowances that are reserved for clean energy technology initiatives and to compensate families through the Making Work Pay tax cut…All additional net proceeds will be used to further compensate the public.” The question is, how much?

Let us be honest. The total costs of the program will be well over the $646 billion when you factor in the private sector mandates and the total costs to reduce emissions. If past economic models are any indication, the total costs of a program could be 3 times more expensive than what the Administration’s numbers predict. And the Administration’s numbers of just the auction revenues aren’t small, roughly $80 billion per year.

Nearly 10 years ago, the Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates did a definitive economic analysis of the costs of the Kyoto Protocol on the domestic economy. They found that Kyoto would cost 2.4 million US jobs and reduce GDP by 3.2%, or about $300 billion annually.

Well, nearly 10 years later we come full circle with the same debate. According to MIT, an analysis of similar legislation as the President’s budget proposal suggests much higher revenues.  An MIT study (“Assessment of U.S. Cap-and-Trade Proposals”, Report 146) published in April 2007 closely modeled the Sanders-Boxer bill (S. 309, 110th Congress), a bill the President co-sponsored, which mandates even less aggressive emissions reductions targets (80% by 2050) as what the President’s budget calls for (83%).  When asked, the Congressional Research Service confirmed for us that the emissions reductions mandated were nearly identical to President Obama’s proposal. That study estimates revenues of nearly $366 billion per year.  That equates to a $3,128 per household tax in 2015 (compared to the President’s $80.3 billion or $684 per household tax in 2015). These numbers certainly start to sound familiar when comparing it to Wharton’s analysis of roughly $300 billion per year.  

The Congressional Budget Office analyses and testimony also emphasize a wide range in allowance values among various cap and trade proposals, including an upper limit of $300 billion annually, further validating the point that this will cost much more than what the Administration is telling us.

To put that in perspective for my colleagues here I point you to this chart that shows the largest tax increases in history.

Now you will hear that some of these revenues are going to fund tax relief and be returned to the people. For purposes of this budget proposal, the Administration plans to spend $15 billion per year to fund clean energy technologies and will allocate $63-68 billion per year to pay for the “making work pay” tax credit, a campaign promise that was not linked to climate change or offsetting increased energy costs that would result from a cap and trade system.  We saw a similar example of this in the Lieberman-Warner debate last year, where sponsors tried to argue that the redistribution would offset the balance of revenue or taxes being taken in by higher energy costs.  However, we learned firsthand that this wasn’t true. While the bill’s sponsors tried to convince us that there was actually tax relief in the bill, we learned that families and workers would still have to pay $6.735 trillion into the system in the form of higher energy costs to get back an estimated $802 billion in tax relief.  That’s a return of $1.00 for every $8.40 paid. 

Similarly in his budget, the President wants to recycle $525 billion through the "making work pay" tax credit that goes to many people who don't pay income taxes.  However, as noted by the Wall Street Journal, “$400 for individuals and $800 for families still doesn't offset carbon's income raid, especially in states with higher carbon use.”  This squares with what the Congressional Budget Office concluded in 2003: “The government could use allowance value to redistribute the cost of a carbon cap and trade program, but it could not eliminate that cost.”

Finally, my colleagues may argue that at least this money will be going to a good purpose, for the cause of fighting global warming and having America lead the way. However, I think many would find it very troubling indeed to learn that even if you believe the IPCC science on climate modeling, the science dictates that it will be ineffective. EPA even confirms it.  Put simply, any U.S. only attempt to avert global warming is a futile effort without meaningful, robust international cooperation. I believe the American people should at least be aware that cap and trade is all cost with no benefit. 

Now my colleagues will argue that we must focus on a new global international policy where the U.S. should lead in order to reach such pie-in-the-sky reduction levels, which need to be even more stringent now, according to many. However, these efforts need a reality check.   The Chinese government announced in January that it is aiming to increase its coal production by about 30 percent in 2015 to meet its energy needs.  According to their reports, even with substantial increases in efficiency and the broad introduction of climate-friendly energy technologies, China's CO2 emissions will almost double in the next two decades compared with 2002 levels.   In addition, India and other developing countries continue to state they will not agree to binding caps and that climate funding should be viewed as an entitlement, not aid, to be paid for by the American taxpayer.

These are the details of what cap and trade is or isn’t that some of my colleagues don’t want discussed here on the Senate floor. But under the guise of transparency and honesty, which the Administration has stated numerous times is one of its top priorities, I think it is fair game for the American public to be informed about both sides of this story.  I look forward over the next few weeks to continue to explore each of these items in the context of a larger budget debate. If it is time for anything, it is time for us to get realistic about these policies, and focus on what is achievable, both globally and domestically, to help bring down energy costs to consumers and make us more energy secure so the American public doesn’t get yet another raw deal.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; US: Oklahoma
KEYWORDS: 111th; agenda; bho44; bhobudget; capandtrade; congress; economy; energy; epw; first100days; inhofe; inhofegw; jamesinhofe; senate; taxes
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To: attiladhun2

And when they realize that all of the freaking “Caps And Trades” are going to the likes of AlGore and the rest of the elites, nothing will happen because the evil Rush Limbaugh will ne responsible for the energy pigs and it is all his fault, according to the CNN/NY Times Poll...


21 posted on 03/21/2009 4:57:16 PM PDT by Shady (The Fairness Doctrine is ANYTHING but fair!!!!)
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To: TC Builders

Will the poor get credits to offset all the increased costs due to taxing carbon?


22 posted on 03/21/2009 5:01:28 PM PDT by D-fendr (Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
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To: Shady

The people in Britain finally turned on the Labour Party, when similar schemes were implemented there, so don’t be too dispirited.


23 posted on 03/21/2009 5:04:48 PM PDT by attiladhun2 (Obama is the anti-Reagan, he believes government is the solution, rather than the problem)
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To: D-fendr

That’s what I’m saying, the poor wont pay anything extra. The Rats will include some kind of credit (just like the heating credit now)so they don’t have to pay $hit.


24 posted on 03/21/2009 5:07:56 PM PDT by TC Builders
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To: D-fendr

The poor will get redistributed money to pay their energy bills.


25 posted on 03/21/2009 5:16:21 PM PDT by abclily
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To: attiladhun2

Cap-and-trade is based on a hoax and is 100% thievery.


26 posted on 03/21/2009 5:18:13 PM PDT by abclily
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To: Delacon
Al Gore and his partner, Goldman Sachs veteran David Blood, last summer acquired 10 percent of Camco, a broker of EU industrial carbon credits. The acquisition was through Gore and Blood's $5 billion UK-based Generation Investment Management LTD (GIM). A few months earlier the partners persuaded the investment board of the Church of England to put $250 million in GIM. Since then the EU carbon credit market has plummeted along with industrial output. A U.S. cap-and-trade system can be merged with the European scheme, inflating the value of Gore's coupons and giving him a captive market. Gore is close to Carol Browner, Obama’s White House energy czar. Energy Secretary Chu, like other Obama cabinet members, is a hand puppet.

The only thing “green” Obama, Browner and Gore desire is the “greenback.”

27 posted on 03/21/2009 5:26:49 PM PDT by Brad from Tennessee ("A politician can't give you anything he hasn't first stolen from you.")
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To: Delacon
The purpose of these programs is to ration fossil-based energy by making it more expensive, and therefore less appealing for public consumption. It is a regressive tax that imposes a greater burden (relative to resources) on the poor than on the rich.

The peasants, forced to live in city slums, will be herded into the cattle cars known as buses while the intellectual effete elite run about in their hybrid limos from their country dachas to the academy.

28 posted on 03/21/2009 5:43:10 PM PDT by seowulf (Petraeus, cross the Rubicon.)
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To: Delacon

I find it very annoying that most of the morons living in this country are not smart enough to figure out what is going to happen when their DemocRAT pals slap this Cap and Tax scam onto their monthly energy bill.


29 posted on 03/21/2009 5:46:28 PM PDT by FlingWingFlyer (Just being a "U.S. citizen" does not make one an American.)
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To: Delacon
You know who's going to get hit the hardest is the very constituents that Democrats supposedly care about. Especially blacks living in the Midwest - when it's cold and there "ain't no heat", who is going to help them? Certainly not the Obama administration or rich liberal elitists.

Folks if this crap passes it'll be what the shot heard around the world was to the American Revolution.

30 posted on 03/21/2009 5:49:03 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist ("President Obama, your agenda is not new, it's not change, and it's not hope" - Rush Limbaugh 02/28)
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To: TC Builders
The Rats will include some kind of credit (just like the heating credit now)so they don’t have to pay $hit.

There won't be any money for the credits, and the middle class and regular rich aren't going to pay more. But Obama and the Dems will keep blaming the energy companies and Republicans and I'm afraid the poor are going to lap it up. What concerns me though is a lot of blacks living in inner-cities are going to get hit the hardest, and let me tell you from first-hand experience blacks do not eff around when their heat goes out in the winter.

31 posted on 03/21/2009 5:52:55 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist ("President Obama, your agenda is not new, it's not change, and it's not hope" - Rush Limbaugh 02/28)
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To: Delacon
The looney tree-huggers and Kumbaya singers just love this kind of rhetoric. "We must sacrifice what we have for the good of the planet!" It won't work without the cooperation of the whole world.

This is simply a way to funnel billions of dollars through Washington on its way to the people in the form of a rebate. Problem is - it takes $8.00 in taxes/fees to send $1.00 to the people. The other $7.00 get stuck in Washington to pay for the bureaucracy.

32 posted on 03/21/2009 5:59:31 PM PDT by REPANDPROUDOFIT
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To: rbg81
This guy is trying to undo 233 years of history in four years.

Hell, Obama will have that accomplished in four months at the rate he's going.

33 posted on 03/21/2009 6:03:09 PM PDT by Windflier (To anger a conservative, tell him a lie. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth.)
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To: Brad from Tennessee

I have been looking for something like your post for a long time! THANKS!


34 posted on 03/21/2009 6:18:41 PM PDT by WellyP (obama must go!)
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To: Da Coyote

What a message it would send if we could get 100 million Americans to put Impeach Obama bumper stickers on their cars.

I don’t think I can survive a full four years of this treasonous communist scum.


35 posted on 03/21/2009 7:04:51 PM PDT by deannadurbin
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To: Delacon

INTREP


36 posted on 03/21/2009 7:26:55 PM PDT by LiteKeeper (Beware of socialism in America; the Islamization of Eurabia)
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To: AdmSmith; Berosus; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; george76; ...

G’night all!


37 posted on 03/21/2009 7:58:25 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: abclily; TC Builders

If the poor get other folks money to pay for the increase in utility bills, that alleviates part of the political problem for the Obamites. You’re quite likely correct.

However, as you’re aware as well, taxing carbon will result in a whole string of costs, visible and invisible, to the economy.

I wonder if it is to complex a communications task to point out that energy cost increases are just the tip of the iceberg - for everyone.

thanks for your replies...


38 posted on 03/21/2009 8:14:22 PM PDT by D-fendr (Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
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To: WellyP
Welly:
I posted this a few days ago. It's more detailed with a link.

A lot of people think Al Gore is crazy—he's crazy all the way to the bank. He's on the board of Google and other Fortune 500 outfits. David Blood and Goldman Sachs helped Gore turn his Climate Crusade into a billion-dollar cash cow. About a year ago they linked up with Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers where Gore was made a limited partner for “green” development.

KPCB is a Silicon Valley venture capital that has made billions by investing in the right start-ups. (One deal to buy 10 percent of Google in 1999 for $50 million is now worth about $10 billion.)

Gore and Blood last summer bought a 10 percent stake in Camco—a UK-based carbon credit trader and broker. Just prior to that they talked the financial board of the Church of England into investing $250 million in Generation.

The industrial slump in Europe has shrunk the value of EU carbon credits. Some analysts have warned that the whole market could collapse. Gore and Blood expect Obama and Congress to impose cap-and-trade on U.S. industry. This will lead to an emission-allowance coupon market that can be merged with the global market and give Gore and Blood an immense captive market.

Beyond that, Gore has positioned himself to be the primary arbitrator between U.S. industry and the federal government in a cap-and-trade America. Simultaneously he can sell carbon credits, rake in huge consulting fees, get paid $100,000 for a forty-minute rant on polar bears, and be a beloved celebrity and Nobel laureate.

Below is a list 2008 news stories about Generation Investment Management from their website:

2 October—Ausra Secures $US 60.6 Million in Funding

17 September—Generation Invests in New Resource Bank

8 September—UK Environment Agency Appoints Generation as Fund Manager

18 July—Gore Seeks 100% Green Energy

4 June—Green Firm Camco Gets Blood and Gore Investment

3 June—Never a Need to Sacrifice Returns

1 May—Generation Raises $683m Climate Fund

30 April—Generation Investment Management to Take Stake in New Forests

11 March—Al Gore's Fund Nears $5 billion

You can see the “green” is about the greenback.

Along with all the IPCC propaganda the UN has estimated that “greenhouse gas” associated with all domestic animal production exceeds that of the entire world transportation sector (trains, planes, cars, trucks, ships, etc.). True “Greens” eat little or no meat and don't weigh as much as Marlon Brando. I know for a fact Al Gore is addicted to hickory-smoked, barbecued pork.

Where is the news media on all this—publishing and broadcasting the press releases of doomsday Chicken Littles.

http://www.generationim.com/news/

39 posted on 03/21/2009 8:30:34 PM PDT by Brad from Tennessee ("A politician can't give you anything he hasn't first stolen from you.")
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To: Brad from Tennessee

Blood and Gore?!? Hello this is a SIGN FROM GOD!!!


40 posted on 03/21/2009 8:39:37 PM PDT by To Hell With Poverty (The War on Poverty is over. Poverty won. - Howie Carr)
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