Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, Mr. Ethanol, went to the Senate floor yesterday and gave a long speech about Senator Daschle's obstructionism hurting the country. He said a lot, which I'll get to, but note what he says about Daschle's ethanol ploy a few weeks ago (it starts on page S5942 of the May 20 Congressional Record, available here):
Just 3 weeks ago, Democrats sacrificed the renewable fuels section of the Energy bill to the block and blame game. It is inconceivable that the renewable fuels amendment offered by the Democratic leader on April 27 could have been designed any better to assure its failure. It was guaranteed to fail. If you understand Senate procedures, and the importance of passing a regionally attractive, comprehensive Energy bill, it is obvious to you that this amendment was designed to fail.Let me offer the proof.
First, everyone knows that any energy bill that has any hope of passing this Congress must be a comprehensive package that addresses a wide variety of energy issues and that draws bipartisan support from all regions of the country.
This fact has long been recognized by ethanol and farm organizations who have been working hard for approval of the renewable fuels standard. Moreover, these groups recognize that the comprehensive energy bill has provisions beyond ethanol and biodiesel that are very important to their members.So why did the Democratic leader fail to offer instead the comprehensive energy bill, which included the renewable fuels standard, as an amendment?
He has been around here long enough to know Senators from other parts of the country, who want to pass pro-energy provisions more important to their states than ethanol, are not likely to vote to strip ethanol out. After all, such an effort would unravel the energy coalition, and thus reduce the likelihood of passing their preferred energy provisions.
So the Democratic leader offered an amendment that he knew was less likely to pass.
The second bit of evidence that this effort was part of the block and blame game, is that no pro-ethanol Republican ally was contacted in advance to help develop a strategy to assure that we secure enough votes.
We have always counted on bipartisan cooperation to support ethanol legislation, and for the first time that I can remember, neither I nor any other pro-ethanol Republican was contacted.
Third, and even more telling, the Democrat leader failed to contact the ethanol and corn grower lobbyists in advance. That, I know, has never happened. If you really want to pass renewable fuels legislation, every one of us in this body knows you better have the National Corn Growers and the Renewable Fuels Association ready and able to help you line up the votes.
Why weren't they contacted? Perhaps it is because Democrats knew they would refuse to be part of an effort to splinter the broad energy coalition, sinking all hope of passing any energy legislation this year, including that for renewable fuels.
They would not willingly let themselves become victims of the Democratic block and blame game!
The fourth bit of evidence that this amendment was designed to fail involves Senate procedure. As soon as the amendment was offered, a signed cloture petition was immediately offered by the Democratic leader to his own amendment. This cloture petition, by the way, was signed exclusively by Democrats.
The most obvious reason to invoke cloture is to cut off a filibuster. But who in the world was going to filibuster this amendment? We were trying to pass a long-overdue solution to differences that has stalled the internet tax bill. Moreover, if the Democratic leader's renewable fuels amendment was so popular, why worry about a filibuster? Let's just vote up or down on the amendment.
Although cutting off debate is the obvious, normal purpose of filing a cloture petition, there is another purpose which is not so widely understood. If cloture is invoked, all amendments to that underlying provision must be germane. If a second degree amendment is not germane, then you have constructed a hurdle requiring 60 votes to overcome.
Could it be, therefore, since no one was filibustering this amendment, that an attempt to invoke cloture was aimed at blocking the more popular, comprehensive energy legislation as a second degree amendment?
Indeed, Senator DOMENICI, recognizing hopes for energy legislation was being jeopardized by this block and blame game, offered the comprehensive energy bill as a second degree.
What most constituents do not know, is that had the democratic leader succeeded in gaining the 60 votes needed to invoke cloture on his amendment, the Domenici amendment would have been ruled out of order as non germane because it was far more expansive than the underlying amendment. It would have taken another 60-vote majority to overcome this ruling. That may not be impossible, but we know that some Senators vote will vote differently on a procedural question than they might on the underlying amendment. So this was another hurdle, another attempt at blocking the more popular provision that, remember, included the renewable fuels standard and had a much higher likelihood of passing.
The fifth piece of evidence that the Democratic leader's amendment was designed to fail is that he offered it to S. 150, instead of the compromise substitute amendment developed and offered by Senator MCCAIN, the chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee.
Given the long stalemate over the internet tax bill, we all knew that Senator MCCAIN's substitute had broken the impasse and that if anything was going to pass, it was his compromise.
But his amendment, No. 3048 was an entire substitute to the language of S. 150. We all know, therefore, that any amendment to S. 150, including amendment No. 3050 offered later by the Democratic leader, would fall when the McCain substitute was approved.
So you should offer an amendment to the substitute that will prevail. If you did not think you knew which would prevail, then you could offer two amendments--one to the underlying bill, and one to the substitute amendment.
Here is a good way to explain this. Suppose our objective is to get supplies to the space station. Do you load your supplies on the booster rocket, or do you load it into the space shuttle? The booster rocket in this case was S. 150, and the McCain substitute was the space shuttle. And we all knew that.
The next bit of evidence that the Democratic leader's ethanol amendment was designed to fail, is the very fact that he picked a bill, again, the internet tax bill, that is controlled and managed by the Senate's most out-spoken, anti-ethanol Senator.[Page: S5944] GPO's PDF
If everything else failed to fail, adding an amendment to a bill to be taken to conference by Chairman MCCAIN was the iron-clad guarantee it would be rejected. And in fact, that is exactly what Senator MCCAIN stated on the floor of the Senate. He stated emphatically, and quite predictably, that if the ethanol or energy amendment passed, he would drop it in conference.
So the Democrat leader's amendment was designed in so may ways to fail, and thus, to block his own amendment. And guess who gets the blame? Republicans.
Farmers lose. All energy consumers lose. But if the block and blame game works and Republicans lose, too, then it is all worth it, because Congressional Democrats win.
The block and blame game.
An interesting exchange occurred between Chairman MCCAIN and Senator DORGAN during the debate of this amendment. Senator MCCAIN said, ``I am sure there may be a headline in South Dakota that says: Senator DASCHLE fights for ethanol.''
Senator DORGAN responded, ``Senator DASCHLE has not offered an amendment for the purpose of a headline in South Dakota.''
Guess what. As soon as his amendment failed, Senator DASCHLE did issue a press release. And not only that, the press release attacked Republicans.
The release, according to the Congressional Quarterly, was headlined, and ``Washington Republicans abandon ethanol.''
The block and blame game: hurts the farmers, hurts Americans, but helps the Democrats.
I would like to share a statement issued by the National Corn Growers following the vote:
"Yesterday, during consideration of legislation dealing with internet sales taxes, Senator DASCHLE offered an amendment to create a Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS). Senator DOMENICI offered S. 2095 as a second degree amendment to the Daschle amendment. S. 2095 contains the RFS as well as other energy provisions. NCGA will support all efforts to pass an energy bill that contains an RFS and addresses the serious problem our nation faces regarding energy. We again call upon Congress to set aside partisan bickering and to pass an energy bill."
I agree wholeheartedly with the National Corn Growers Association. We have serious problems facing our nation, and we have several very important bills aimed at addressing these problems that are falling victim to the block and blame game.
I wish that what I was told by a Democratic lobbyist, about the strategy to block everything this year ..... I wish that it were not true. I hope that the Democratic leaders will have a change of heart and a change of campaign strategy that allows vital pieces of legislation to be signed by the President this year, and then let the election be fought over who has the best ideas or who will do better if they take control of Congress or the White House.
Daschle's political gamesmanship betrayed farmers. And then he blamed Thune! I'm embarrassed for Daschle.
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