History was made in the House of Representatives on Aug. 1 at
11:20 a.m. when Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.) lead a cadre of Republicans,
including John Shadegg (R-Ariz.), Mike Pence (R-Ind.), Kevin Brady
(R-Texas), Don Manzullo (R-Ill.), Lynn Westmoreland (R-Ga.) and
Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) in a remarkable protest.
They stormed the House floor with the lights dimmed and the
microphones turned off by Speaker Nancy Pelosi to demand a vote on
new domestic production of oil. Republicans have pledged to
continue the protest until the Democratic leadership allows an
up-or-down vote on drilling and more domestic production of oil to
reduce gasoline prices for American consumers.
A House leadership aide told me that this rebellion started
because members were shocked and upset that Pelosi wasn't "allowing
members to make their traditional special order speeches." As a
result, "a few members decided to make their speeches anyway to the
guests in the gallery." The rebellion grew out a few speeches and
lead to a "six hour protest, which in turn led to the current
multi-week campaign." What started as a few members protesting the
strong-arm tactics of the Speaker has lead to a daily protest in
the House chamber.
For months, Americans have sat by as lawmakers refused to act on
the escalating energy crisis. Instead, liberals in Congress cast
blame on American investors, American oil companies and Americans
who don't fully inflate their tires. Even though gas prices have
started to ease over the past few weeks, conservatives should be
weary of complacency, especially among their elected officials.
Gasoline prices could easily surge back above $4 a gallon in the
event of a supply disruption or any further weakening of the
dollar.
Demonstrating that not every member of Congress is oblivious to
the pain being felt by Americans, dozens of Republicans stayed in
Washington, D.C. to protest the lack of democratic action on high
gas prices moments after Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Cal.) gaveled the
House of Representatives into recess. Each day since, the number of
Republicans participating has grown. "This is the People's House,
and the American people want a voice in this debate," Rep. Gresham
Barrett (R-S.C.) said.
As the American people flooded into the House Chamber to witness
history, it became apparent the debate was one-sided -- not a
liberal to be found (with the exception of Rep. Dennis Kucinich of
Ohio, who seemed amused by the proceedings). Rep. Jon Kline
(R-Minn.) said Republicans "would love to have our Democrat
colleagues here." However, that's unlikely to happen, since
President Bush said he wouldn't call Congress back to Washington
and House Speaker Pelosi (D-Calif.) has continued her opposition to
any solutions that are pro-American energy.
As liberals remain disengaged and outright hostile to American
energy production, the country -- and to some extent the
presidential candidates -- appear to be passing them by. According
to a recent Gallup poll, 89% of Americans believe congressional
inaction has been an "important reason" that gas prices have
reached record highs. Not surprisingly, a slew of new polls
indicate a majority of Americans want to access America's energy
offshore, including 57% of liberals, 57% of Floridians and 51% of
Californians. Deftly reading the tea leaves in June, John McCain
announced his support for offshore energy exploration, and Barack
Obama admitted he had to refine his position because Republicans
have been so effective in their messaging.
What, then, could explain Pelosi's steadfast resistance to
allowing a real debate and vote on American energy exploration? The
Politico suggests that Pelosi is just biding
her time until the Democrats control every lever of power in
Washington next year. Rep. Westmoreland offers this explanation: "A
San Francisco mentality is controlling the energy policy of our
country. She [Pelosi] is making her constituency happy while ours
is suffering."
There is no doubt that working and middle-class America is
suffering. A colleague of mine at The Heritage Foundation, Karen
Campbell, points out that as consumers dip into their personal
savings to cover their rising costs, they are likely to increase
borrowing, which results in less savings, higher interest payments,
constrained spending, poor economic growth and a lower standard of
living.
The good news for Americans is that come Oct. 1, the 27-year-old
congressional moratorium on offshore energy production will expire.
The bad news is that liberals in Congress can block new drilling by
continuing the congressional ban on exploration without a vote on
the issue. Conservatives should not rest until Americans have
access to American energy and should demand that Congress take no
action that doesn't result in new domestic exploration and
drilling.
Brian Darling is director of U.S. Senate Relations at The Heritage Foundation
First appeared in Human Events