By

Stephanie Condon /

The Politico/ June 26, 2009, 5:19 PM

To Fight Bill, GOP Turns On Business

AP

This story was written by Erika Lovley and Lisa Lerer.

Senate Republicans have come up with a novel way to fight the climate change bill working its way through the House: Tee off on Big Business, and tie it around the neck of the Democrats.

In a strategy memo obtained by POLITICO, Republican staffers for the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works say Republicans should argue that Democrats are embracing "Wall Street traders," "polluters" and "others in corporate America" who are "guilty of manipulating national climate policy to increase profits on the backs of consumers."

The Republican role-reversal may be counterintuitive - GOP candidates routinely describe themselves as "pro-business" - but Republicans say it reflects their party's new reality.

"Business is not always going to be a good friend of the Republicans, and that needs to be reflected in our strategy," said MWR Strategies President Michael McKenna, a Republican energy lobbyist. "The GOP business model is probably busted forever. It started to break apart on TARP, and it could permanently break apart on climate change."

While the GOP tries to hold the line against a massive climate change bill, a number of major corporations - including Duke Energy, Johnson & Johnson and Shell Corp. - are backing cap-and-trade proposals by the United States Climate Action Partnership coalition, a group of environmental groups and businesses advocating legislation to reduce greenhouse gases.

The GOP memo accuses USCAP members of "blatant rent-seeking."

Democrats laughed off the harsh language Tuesday, saying it's too late in the day to convince voters that Democrats - rather than Republicans - are in bed with Big Business.

"I find it extremely amusing that suddenly the Democrats are being attacked as being too friendly to business creation. I don't get it," said Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), chairwoman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. "No one is going to believe that the Republicans are attacking us for creating jobs and new businesses. It doesn't make sense."

Added House Democratic aide: "The Party of ExxonMobil and Peabody coal cannot credibly convince the American public that they are the champions of small businesses and consumers."

A climate change bill sponsored by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) is expected to clear Waxman's committee this week. A number of Republican leaders, as well as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, have long argued that such cap-and-trade legislation would raise energy costs for consumers and do damage to an already fragile economy.

"House and Senate Republicans are clearly working together to develop the best strategy to defeat a national energy tax that will increase energy costs, raise taxes in the middle of a recession and drive good-paying jobs overseas," said Michael Steel, spokesman for House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio). "The only constituency that's important to us is ... the American people."

The GOP memo focuses on the Democrats' work with USCAP, calling the group a collection of "polluters" who are "writing significant portions of the Waxman-Markey bill." There's no dispute that the group has worked closely with the Democrats; a source who attended a committee markup on the climate change bill Tuesday said that Waxman's staff had reserved a front-row seat for the group.

But USCAP spokeswoman Katie Mandes rejected the notion that her group is "big business," saying that it has "several members that would be classified as small to medium businesses and five nonovernment organizations."

"We are completely nonpartisan," Mandes said. "We have pledged to work with Congress, the administration and with any and all stakeholders."

Knowing they probably can't stop the bill in the House, Republicans are doing what they can to slow its progress - and to make the process as painful as possible for vulnerable Democrats.

A slew of Republican amendments has delayed committee consideration of the bill. During five hours of markup Tuesday, members made it through only two amendments; Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) said Republicans could offer about 400 amendments - 70 to 80 of which could require committee consideration.

Asked whether Waxman would be able to move the bill out of committee by Thursday - his self-imposed deadline - Barton said: "He's dreaming. It ain't gonna happen."

Waxman said Tuesday that the committee would work late into the evening Tuesday, and again Wednesday, to get the bill done - and he hinted that he might start limiting the amount of time for debate on each amendment.

Barton has offered his own alternative to the Democrats' bill, but supporters of the Waxman-Markey effort says his proposal contains the same sort of corporate giveaways the Republicans have accused the Democrats of providing.

"Joe Barton's alternative energy bill is full of more handouts to big oil companies that made $650 billion in profits over the past eight years," said Daniel J. Weiss, a climate director at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

Weiss said that the GOP effort to cast itself as "the party of consumers is as laughable as Bristol Palin advocating teenage abstinence."

But this isn't the first time that GOP and Big Business have split. During the recession in the early 1980s, Republicans and some industrial interests split over Democrats' proposal to place tariffs on imported cars and other goods, according to the Heritage Foundation. And in recent months, Republicans voted against President Barack Obama's economy stimulus plan and the release of additional Troubled Asset Relief Program funds, despite significant business support for both.

Kenneth P. Green, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, said small business may be a better match for the GOP now because it will find "permitting and carbon regulations more burdensome than bigger businesses."

"Big Business has no loyalty to any party - it exists to do its job and make a profit," Green said. "I don't see [the Republicans] going back to the party of Big Business. This could be a permanent breech."

By Erika Lovley and Lisa Lerer
The Politico
  • Stephanie Condon On Twitter »

    Stephanie Condon is a political reporter for CBSNews.com.

10 Comments Add a Comment
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U-R-So-Wrong says:
I like the mantra NO JOBS NO PEACE. I also liked Cindy Sheehan mooning the crowd at the last SURRENDER FEST 09 during the breaking of the store windows portion of the program. After all, who doesn't hate to pay retail?
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sjc_1 says:
jonesjep,

You talk like history began yesterday. That the 8 years of debt, war and lies never happened and had no effect on what we face today. People like you must be born with a piece of your brain missing, because reality seems to escape you at all times.
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antoniof123 says:
Just when you though the Republicans could not do anything even more stupid then before they bring you more to laugh at.
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impeachbhb says:
This is treason. The Republicans are trying to stand in the way of the Obama administration gaining absolute control over middle and lower class America. Have not fear, they will not prevail.
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dfnj2009 says:
Time to bring the troops home before the riots begin.

NO JOBS, NO PEACE, NO JOBS, NO PEACE......

Thank God the Department of homeland security will be ready:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=halliburton+concentration+camps&aq=0&oq=halliburton+concent

And all you naive Republicans think God did not know exactly what would happen to the apple in the garden with a naked woman prancing about!!
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sjc_1 says:
Repugs have so much gall, it is astounding. After 8 years and $5 trillion in debt, they want you to believe that they are fiscally responsible. After decades of being in bed with big polluting business, they want you to think that the other party is the one fronting for them. What is next, making you think up is down and north is south? The New Speak of Big Brother GOP is amazing.
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omega39-2009 says:
The Republican party is too stupid to understand that most Americans are no longer falling for their stupid little games. For 30 years we have watched Republicans stand with big business and the bankers while they eviscerated the middle class in this country, we will not soon forget that.
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jntlw says:
I hate Repiblicans, they do not spend time to come up with counter proposals that might help our country, no but rather they spend their time diabolically scheming of ways to obstruct, deflect, or distort what the Democrats have put forth. Get rid of all Republicans as they are so anti-America I can no longer tolerate their vile evils. they are worthless agitators that do nothing but destroy!
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scyouth says:
Interesting; what these staffers are saying is "make democrats look like republicans and republicans look like democrats and we'll get ahead." Isn't that a total repudiation of everything the republicans have done wrt the economy and a complete endorsement of everything that democrats have tried to do? Hmmmm!

Re jonesjep, who I try to ignore, but this time he's way into la la land. The car companies were bankrupt under Bush's regime, Obama is trying to right the boat without losing ALL the UAW jobs in the country. Interesting doublespeak, a republican espousing sympathy for UAW workers - how ironic. Global warming "complete scientific lies" - typical right-wing attitude - if you can't understand it, claim it's a lie. "More debt than George to George." This is a total lie. Under Bush the National debt rose from a little over 5 trillion to over 10 trillion - over 100%. Obama so far has added another 600 billion, which, while a big number, it's only 5% of the total. Gas prices have been artificially low in this country for eons. If gas prices rise, people by more, smaller cars, which decreases our dependance on foreign oil, and a lot quicker than the 10-12 years it would take to add 2% to our supply by digging up Alaska. "These are direct hits to the middle and lower class Americans." This again is a total laugh. Since when have republicans EVER cared about the middle and lower classes. Their ONLY aim in life is to increase the wealth of the rich and claim every measure to help the middle and lower classes socialism.

If this is level of thinking of those the republicans think of as their base, they're looking at a long time in the wilderness.
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jonesjep says:
Right now the Democrats are only the party of elected Democrats. They have not created any jobs for their voters. In fact the economy is continuing to bleed jobs. They have put 10's of thousands of UAW workers out of their jobs with their poor automotive plans. They are crippling not only major corporations but mainly small business with increased business tax rates plus the idiotic "cap and trade" scheme based on complete scientific lies. They have created more debt in a few months than George to George did. That is Washington to Bush. They have said they want gas prices to rise. They have guaranteed increased utility rates. Who are they actually helping? These are direct hits to the middle and lower class Americans.
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