Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

U.S. Senate debates Keystone XL before milestone vote on pipeline bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2014 12:07 PM

    WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate is poised to vote for the first time on the Keystone XL pipeline this evening — a milestone 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. It's not clear, though, that they have either the numbers or the crucial presidential support required to sign a bill into law.

    Mary Landrieu conceded that she didn't know what would happen. The pipeline proponent from Louisiana said it's been years since there's been such last-minute uncertainty over how members will vote.

    The Democratic senator is in danger of losing her seat, and she's been pushing colleagues for a vote before she faces a runoff election next month in her oil-refining state.

    "What is everyone upset about? We've been building pipelines for a long, long time — and we need to build this one," said Landrieu, who is a co-sponsor of the bill.

    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.

    The Senate's Democratic leadership had never allowed a vote before today. It apparently relented in a long-shot bid to save Landrieu's seat, relinquishing the floor for a six-hour debate and vote expected around 6:15 p.m. ET.

    The debate looked like a battle of duelling charts.

    As they delivered speeches, members for the project stood next to maps showing all the other pipelines on the continent and flow-charts showing how long the Keystone XL project had been delayed.

    A main project opponent stood next to a poster that said, "Misery Follows Tar Sands." California's Barbara Boxer also showed pictures of oil-linked pollution, and linked the toxins in oil to a litany of ailments ranging from cancer to asthma.

    "What does XL stand for?... For me, it's Extra-Lethal," Boxer said, showing pictures of a dark sky over a Texas refinery.

    "This is what it looks like in Port Arthur, Tex. And this is what the kids have to put up with. Here is a playground, in a low-income community... We will have to bear the burdens of the refining. The filth in the air. The petcoke in our cities — as we see the products being exported to other countries... This trail of misery should not be put upon the American people."

    The debate also featured duelling donors.

    The string of speakers who led off the debate happened to be the top recipients of cash from pro- and anti-oil constituencies in U.S. federal politics — where donations from companies and special interests remain legal.

    On the pro-pipeline side, Landrieu was the No. 3 recipient in donations from the oil-and-gas sector among all 535 members of the U.S. Congress in the last election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a pro-transparency group that tabulates known corporate donations. The man who launched the debate, top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell, was the No. 4 recipient.

    On the opposing side, Boxer was the No. 2 listed recipient of alternative-energy donations in her last Senate election campaign. The only member who received more that year was top Senate Democrat Harry Reid — who until now was responsible for blocking a Keystone vote.

    The project's tougher hurdle 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 early next year.

    Keystone XL is listed as a top priority of the incoming, Republican-dominated Senate. There's speculation Obama might insist on a political concession from his rivals — perhaps an infrastructure bill — in exchange for him approving Keystone.

    The Republicans already sound prepared to revisit the issue after the holidays.

    McConnell promised that if the bill doesn't pass this week, he'll bring it back for a vote after he's sworn in as the new leader of a Republican-dominated Congress, in January.

    "Keystone XL is just common sense. It's a shovel-ready jobs project that would help thousands of Americans find work, it would increase our supply of North American energy, and it would do all that with minimal net climate impact," said the incoming Senate leader.

    "That's why the American people support it, that's why Republicans support it, and that's why so many rank-and-file Democrats support it too."

    Canada came up a few times during the debate.

    Boxer described meeting people who live near the Alberta oilsands and listening to their stories about the environmental damage they've witnessed. The bill's original sponsor, on the other hand, touted a list of benefits.

    One of those benefits is geopolitical, said Republican John Hoeven.

    "It's about national security by helping us build energy security in this country with our closest friend and ally — Canada," Hoeven said. "We're working together with Canada so we don't have to get Venezuela, or the Middle East, or other parts of the world."

    Hoeven's biggest donor, according to the Center for Responsive Politics: the oil and gas sector.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Harper in Australia for G20 summit as Russia flexes military muscles

    Harper in Australia for G20 summit as Russia flexes military muscles
    BRISBANE, Australia — Stephen Harper has arrived in Australia for a G20 summit expected to be overshadowed by Russian aggression.

    Harper in Australia for G20 summit as Russia flexes military muscles

    Harper says he doesn't support war on Mideast countries, only ISIL

    Harper says he doesn't support war on Mideast countries, only ISIL
    AUCKLAND, New Zealand — On the eve of a G20 summit in Australia expected to focus in part on the crisis in Syria and Iraq, Stephen Harper says Canada does not support war on the Syrian government or any Middle East nation — only war against the Islamic State.

    Harper says he doesn't support war on Mideast countries, only ISIL

    Another psychiatrist tells Magnotta murder trial accused was in psychotic state

    Another psychiatrist tells Magnotta murder trial accused was in psychotic state
    MONTREAL — Another forensic psychiatrist who analyzed Luka Rocco Magnotta says he came to the conclusion he was suffering a schizophrenia-linked psychotic episode when he killed and dismembered Jun Lin.

    Another psychiatrist tells Magnotta murder trial accused was in psychotic state

    Timeline of key events at Quebec's Charbonneau Commission

    Timeline of key events at Quebec's Charbonneau Commission
    MONTREAL — Justice France Charbonneau gave her closing statement on Friday at the commission that looked into corruption in Quebec's construction industry. The inquiry tackled illegal political party financing, collusion among engineering contracts, and organized crime's tentacles in the industry.

    Timeline of key events at Quebec's Charbonneau Commission

    Father of victim in child porn case satisfied with conditional discharge

    Father of victim in child porn case satisfied with conditional discharge
    HALIFAX — A young man who pleaded guilty to making child pornography after he took a picture of an intoxicated teenager having sex at a party was given a conditional discharge and a sharp reprimand by the judge for destroying the girl's life.

    Father of victim in child porn case satisfied with conditional discharge

    Ship crew stranded in Newfoundland is running low on water, food: union leader

    Ship crew stranded in Newfoundland is running low on water, food: union leader
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A union leader says 11 men stranded on a cargo ship at the port of Argentia in Newfoundland need drinking water, food and warm clothing.

    Ship crew stranded in Newfoundland is running low on water, food: union leader