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FRONT PAGE CONTRIBUTOR

Obama’s Stacked Deck

It's the Chicago Way.

When President Obama named the members of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, he left little to chance.

Although the Executive Order which created the Commission allowed that its membership

… shall be drawn from among distinguished individuals, and may include those with experience in or representing the scientific, engineering, and environmental communities, the oil and gas industry, or any other area determined by the President to be of value to the Commission in carrying out its duties.

… there are two scientists, no engineers, and no real representatives of the oil and gas industry. The panel is primarily made up of lawyers, environmentalists and career politicians.

One of the members is president of the National Resources Defense Council, one of five environmental groups that has filed an appeal to Judge Feldman’s ruling against the deepwater drilling moratorium.

Republican Senators have criticized the makeup of the Commission:

Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., charged the Obama administration with keeping oil and gas drilling experts off its seven-member commission in favor of people who philosophically oppose offshore exploration. …

Barrasso said the panel’s makeup defied Obama’s assertion that he wants an independent review of the oil spill.

“The commission’s background and expertise doesn’t really include an oil or drilling expert, so … people across the country are wondering about the administration’s goals,” Barrasso said. “Is it really about making offshore energy exploration safer? Or is it about shutting down our offshore and American oil and gas?”

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar cries foul:

[The members of the Commission are] “very distinguished people … who will transcend partisan politics and ideology”  …

Salazar dismissed the senators’ criticism.

“What is wrong is the playing of politics with this issue,” Salazar said. “This is an issue of a national crisis.”

Mr. Secretary, I agree that it’s wrong to play politics with this issue. The public deserves an impartial panel, one with sufficient diversity of experience and opinion that its conclusions do not appear to be preordained.

Here’s a quick summary of the panel’s makeup:

Co-chairs

  • Lawyer, career politician and anti-offshore drilling advocate.
  • Lawyer, former EPA chief and Chairman of World Wildlife Fund.

 Executive Director

  • Law professor, environmental lawyer and author.

 Members

  • President of the NRDC.
  • Physicist and Dean of Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Science.
  • Lawyer and career politician.
  • Marine scientist and ocean policy advocate.
  • Lawyer and environmental advocate.

And here’s more detail:

  • Bob Graham, Co-chairman – Career politician; former Democratic Governor and Senator from Florida and famous opponent of offshore drilling. Education: University of Florida, Harvard Law School. (Source.) 
  • William K. Reilly, Co-chairman – Former Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency under the first President Bush. Reilly is Chairman Emeritus of the World Wildlife Fund, and is a director of DuPont, ConocoPhillips (since stepped aside), the National Geographic Society, and the Packard Foundation. Reilly is founding partner of Aqua International Partners, L.P., a private equity fund dedicated to investing in companies engaged in water and renewable energy. Education: Yale University (B.A./history), Harvard Law School. Masters in urban planning from Columbia. (Source.)
  • Richard Lazarus, Executive Director – Professor of Law at the Georgetown University Law Center, where he teaches Environmental Law, Natural Resources Law, Supreme Court Advocacy, and Torts. Professor Lazarus has represented the United States, state and local governments, and environmental groups in the United States Supreme Court in 37 cases and has presented oral argument in 13 of those cases. He most recently served as counsel of record for environmental respondents Riverkeeper et al in Entergy v. Riverkeeper, argued in December 2008. He has published two books, The Making of Environmental Law, and Environmental Law Stories. Education:  B.S./Chemistry, B.A/Economics from the University of Illinois, Harvard Law School. (Source.)
  • Ms. Frances G. Beinecke,  Member president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, where she has spent her entire career: Under Frances’s leadership, the organization has launched a new strategic campaign that sharply focuses NRDC’s efforts on curbing global warming, moving America beyond oil, reviving the world’s oceans, saving endangered wild places, stemming the tide of toxic chemicals and accelerating the greening of China.Education: Yale College, B.A., 1971; Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, M.S., 1974. (Source.)
  • Dr. Cherry A. Murray is the Dean of the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. She is also the current President of the American Physical Society and Chair of the Division of Engineering and Physical Science of the National Research Council. Professor Murrary has published more than 70 papers in peer-reviewed journals and holds two patents in near-field optical data storage and optical display technology. Education: B.S./Ph.D. in physics 1978 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (Source.)
  • Frances “Fran” Ulmer – has spent 30 years in public service at the local, state and national level, including service as the first female Lieutenant Governor of Alaska from 1994 to 2002. Education: bachelor’s degree in economics and political science and a J.D. from the University of Wisconsin Law School. (Source.)
  • Dr. Donald F. Boesch is President of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental and Estuarine Studies (CEES), where he also holds the rank of Professor. He is a science advisor to the Chesapeake Bay Program and to Maryland state agencies and in such diverse regions as Alaska (advisor to the Federal and State trustees on the Exxon Valdez Oil spill), San Francisco Bay, coastal Louisiana, and south Florida. Education: B.S. Biology, Tulane University. Ph.D. Marine Science, College of William and Mary, 1971. (Source.)
  • Terry Garcia - executive vice president for the National Geographic Society. Prior to joining the Society in 1999, Garcia was the assistant secretary of commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, U.S. Department of Commerce, and deputy administrator (general counsel) of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Garcia also serves on the boards of the Institute for Exploration/Mystic Aquarium and the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation. Education: B.A./International Relations, American University, and the George Washington University Law School. (Source.)

P.S. – It’s not that their Ivy League backgrounds makes them necessarily unqualified for the job; it’s just that there’s lots of us out here who already know what an oil well looks like, who know the difference between a rig and a platform, who live a breathe this stuff every day. Even if our degrees are from cow colleges.

P.P.S. – It would appear that the Times-Picayune agrees with me.

Cross-posted at VladEnBlog.

COMMENTS

  • jackhammer

    .

  • Deskpilot

    “If you write our report for us and draw our conclusions, we will proof read it for you. We are all very smart people after all.”
    “Tell us what you want in our report…”
    “Thanks for sponsoring this Ivy League reunion!”

    ‘Rig,’ isn’t that what ACORN does?
    “Platform’ type of shoes
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBT4-EXqddo

  • mustango

    “That group has just about enough competence to fill their gas tanks.”

    • theBlur

      they have their peons do that dirty work for them.

  • WarEagle01

    that will accomplish exactly nothing. Good Lord, can’t this buffoon get even one thing right? Is it 2012 yet?

  • Zaber

    .. this commission is more geared towards laying blame on BP and figuring out exactly how much money they can get out of BP (for the people, of course), rather to provide any actual guidance or oversight of the oil spill crisis.

    On a side note (and somewhat related).. has anyone else seen all of the silly progressive nuts calling for Obama to seize BPs assets and nationalize the U.S. branch of BP? Silly wannabe Communists just can’t wait to start waiting in line for coffee and toilet paper, can they? Maxine Waters is just drooling at the thought..

    • eastbaylarry

      It is geared to ban the exploration, drilling, refining and consumption of petroleum.

      These are ‘eco-nuts’ strategically placed to cripple oil use by the US.

  • E Pluribus Unum

    Not that we can stop it, but we sure ought to point it out early and often.

    And the minute we run the House, we should put a stop to it. That minute. January 2, or whatever is the first day of business.

  • Achance

    with Comrade Obama’s regime. She served as Tony Knowles’ Lt. Gov. and was very much a part of Knowles’ earning the moniker “Task Force Tony;” no reason to actually do anything when you can just give a bunch of your buddies nice jjobs with lots of travel to just talk about doing something – or not. When she was mayor of Juneau, Assembly meetings commonly ran into the wee hours of the night. She headed an IT Task Force when Alaska’s government was first getting wired in the ’90s that was notorious for endless meetings – and lots of travel to see how others were doing it.

    I don’t know what brought her here in the ’70s but she almost immediately went to work for Gov. Jay Hammond. Hammond was a Republican, but the McGovernite wing of the Democrat Party here, the Ad Hoc Democratic Coalition, bolted the Party candidate, Bill Egan, and supported Hammond. Consequently, the government of Alaska quickly became comprised of twenty and thirty something left-wing Democrats; they even controlled the Legislature for a couple of sessions. We were well and truly the Peoples’ Republic of Alaska in the mid to late ’70s. That’s when we invented the Permanent Fund Dividend and legalized marajuana. Unfortunately, those now-fifty and sixty somethings or people they hired and trained are still running most of Alaska’s government.

    Here in Alaska, both she and Knowles had to be somewhat restrained with their Greenie leanings or they’d have been thrown out on their ears. They did the standard Democrat “we support ANWR so long as there are adequate environmental safeguards,” then, of course, their Greenie friends would make sure that the environmental safeguards were never adequate.

    • Richard Mullins

      but I thinking the might want to add a member from the Left side of the aisle here in Texas. I was thinking if they going to have Bob Graham, why not an out of work politician like Gary Mauro. It help get some more street cred with Texas Democrats. Alaska is seen by the Democrats are a model to have so having Ullmer is a good thing.

  • Superheater

    http://www.redstate.com/superheater/2010/06/26/barack-obama-episteme-vs-techne/

  • dennism

    http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/blogs/beltway-confidential/dont-expect-objectivity-from-this-obama-oil-spill-commission-appointee-97624059.html

    Re: Frances Beinecke

  • dennism

    http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/blogs/beltway-confidential/dont-expect-objectivity-from-this-obama-oil-spill-commission-appointee-97624059.html

    Re: Frances Beinecke