WORLD> America
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McCain urges end to ban on offshore drilling
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-06-17 11:25 The current drilling moratorium is a perennial cause for controversy, pitting those who favor additional exploration against environmentalists. The current ban covers an estimated 80 percent of US coastal waters. Given Democratic opposition in Congress to ending it, the Bush administration and congressional Republicans have been seeking the type of state option McCain endorsed. The GOP presidential candidate said a recent run-up in the price of oil was having an adverse effect on consumers. "We've seen the impact of it in the form of food prices, in the form of gasoline, in the form of threats of inflation and indeed indications of inflation, and we must embark on a national mission to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil," he told reporters. McCain has sought to carve out something of a middle road on energy issues, parting company with many Republicans by calling for measures to reduce greenhouse gases and opposing drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska, for example. Later, at a fundraising event in Dallas, McCain told a questioner in his audience that he remains opposed to drilling in the wildlife refuge, a pristine wilderness area that has been the subject of pitched battles in Congress in recent years. The Senate last month rejected a GOP energy plan, 56-42, that included a provision similar to McCain's proposal. It would have allowed a state's governor to petition to have the federal moratorium lifted for waters off its coast. Republican senators argued there are some 14 billion barrels of recoverable oil available in waters now off limits. Also, the House twice has approved giving states the right to opt out of the federal ban, both when the GOP held the majority, but the proposal has never made it through the Senate. McCain made his remarks before leaving the Washington area for a pair of fundraisers in Dallas. Another fundraising event, originally set for the home of Clayton Williams in Midland, Texas, was pulled from the schedule after news organizations pressed McCain's campaign about holding an event with the 1990 Texas GOP gubernatorial candidate who once joked that women should give in while being raped. McCain sought to minimize the fallout, telling reporters his aides had not known of the earlier comment when they scheduled the event "We'll do it someplace else and I understand he's not attending. That's pretty much the sum of it all," he said. He said he would hold another fundraising in the Midland area later this summer and Williams would not attend. Democrats have called on McCain to return more than $300,000 that Williams had raised for McCain from other individuals. |