Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lame duck U.S. Senate to vote today on Keystone XL pipeline bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2014 12:13 PM

    WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate is expected to vote tonight on the Keystone XL pipeline — the latest chapter in a drawn-out political dogfight that has dragged on for years.

    Pipeline supporters need 60 votes to avoid prolonged filibustering on the bill, and they're closer than they've ever been — but it's not clear that they have the numbers.

    The pipeline was approved last week for the ninth time by the Republican-dominated House of Representatives, but it faces a tougher test in the Senate, which is still controlled by Democrats until a new session begins next year.

    A tougher hurdle still will be the desk of U.S. President Barack Obama, who is widely expected to veto the legislation, which would essentially short-circuit the White House's own environmental review process.

    Keystone XL, a political football almost since its inception six years ago, would transport bitumen from Alberta's oilsands to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast.

    Politics suggest today's vote will be anything but definitive.

    A Nebraska court decision on the pipeline route is expected in the new year and the administration says it won't release its regulatory review until after the verdict is in.

    Those developments and a new Congress will open the way for a final round of political horse-trading.

    The main reason the issue is even before the lame duck Senate is that Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu needs an issue to help her stave off an expected defeat in a December run-off election in the oil-refining state of Louisiana.

    Allowing the bill to pass would also starve Obama of valuable leverage he might prefer using in two months.

    Getting a green light for Keystone XL is widely expected to be among the biggest policy priorities of next year's Republican-dominated Senate.

    If Obama is inclined to approve the project, he might prefer to wait until the new year, when he could extract political concessions from the Senate in exchange for allowing the bill to proceed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo

    Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo
    U.S. officials name the dead Ottawa shooting suspect as Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, a Canadian born in 1982. He shot reserve soldier Corporal Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial before running inside Parliament and exchanging gunfire with guards

    Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo

    Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies

    Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies
    WINNIPEG - Police have charged a woman who was renting a storage locker where the remains of six babies were found, but they say it could be months before they know who the infants were or how they died.

    Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies

    No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa

    No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa
    TORONTO - Toronto's chief of police says officers in the country's largest city will be more visible today as a result of this week's attacks on soldiers in Ottawa and Quebec.

    No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa

    Shooting spurs fresh concerns about security on Parliament Hill

    Shooting spurs fresh concerns about security on Parliament Hill
    OTTAWA - The fatal shooting of a soldier at the National War Memorial and the subsequent gunfire on Parliament Hill on Wednesday have renewed concerns about security in the capital.

    Shooting spurs fresh concerns about security on Parliament Hill

    Ottawa Shooting: President Obama Says We're All Shaken By It

    Ottawa Shooting: President Obama Says We're All Shaken By It
    WASHINGTON - U.S. President Barack Obama: Canada shooting 'tragic' — 'we're all shaken by it'; no information on motive.

    Ottawa Shooting: President Obama Says We're All Shaken By It

    Suspect In Terror-linked Attack Had Been Arrested In Summer: RCMP

    Suspect In Terror-linked Attack Had Been Arrested In Summer: RCMP
    MONTREAL - The man police say deliberately drove a car into two soldiers in a "despicable act" the government linked to terrorist ideology had been arrested by RCMP this summer as he was getting ready to leave the country, a spokeswoman for the federal police force said Tuesday.

    Suspect In Terror-linked Attack Had Been Arrested In Summer: RCMP