Hillary Clinton Picks TPP and Fracking Advocate To Set Up Her White House
Zaid
Jilani, Naomi LaChance
17
August, 2016
TWO
BIG ISSUES dogged Hillary Clinton during the Democratic primary: the
Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement (TPP) and fracking. She had
a long history of supporting both.
Under
fire from Bernie Sanders, she came out against the TPP and took a
more critical position on fracking. But critics wondered if this was
a sincere conversion or simply campaign rhetoric.
Now,
in two of the most significant personnel moves she will ever make,
she has signaled a lack of sincerity.
She
chose as her vice presidential running mate Tim Kaine, who voted to
authorize fast-track powers for the TPP and praised the agreement
just two days before he was chosen.
And
now she has named former Colorado Democratic Senator and Interior
Secretary Ken Salazar to be the chair of her presidential transition
team — the group tasked with helping set up the new administration
should she win in November. That includes identifying, selecting, and
vetting candidates for over 4,000 presidential appointments.
As
a senator, Salazar was widely considered a reliable friend to the
oil, gas, ranching and mining industries. As interior secretary, he
opened the Arctic Ocean for oil drilling, and oversaw the botched
response to the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Since returning
to the private sector, he has been an ardent supporter of the TPP,
while pushing back against curbs on fracking.
The
TPP would enhance the ability of corporations to sue to overturn
environmental regulations, but Salazar helped a pro-TPP front group,
the “Progressive Coalition for American Jobs,” argue the
opposite.
In
a November 2015 USA Today op-ed that Salazar co-wrote with Bruce
Babbitt, the two men argued that the TPP would be the “the greenest
trade deal ever” by promoting sustainable energy. Both Salazar and
Babbitt cited their former positions as interior secretaries to boost
their credibility.
The
following month, Salazar authored a Denver Post op-ed with two former
Colorado governors also affiliated with PCAJ, arguing that the
agreement would protect the state’s scenic beauty: “And as a
state rich with natural wonder and a long history of conservation,
Colorado can be proud that the TPP includes the highest environmental
standards of any trade agreement in history.”
Shortly
after leaving his post at the Obama administration, Salazar appeared
at an oil and gas industry conference to argue in favor of fracking.
“We
know that, from everything we’ve seen, there’s not a single case
where hydraulic fracking has created an environmental problem for
anyone,” Salazar told the attendees, who included the vice
president of BP America, another keynote speaker at the conference.
“We need to make sure that story is told.”
The
EPA acknowledged in 2015 that fracking has contaminated drinking
water wells. And methane, a gas with a climate impact 86 times that
of carbon dioxide, is known to leak from fracked gas infrastructure.
Salazar
is on the leadership team of a business group in Colorado fighting
against a pair of ballot initiatives that could limit fracking. The
Denver Post referred to the group as the “political equivalent of a
tested military reserve unit that the [Denver Chamber of Commerce]
calls into action when it believes business interests in the state
face a serious threat.”
Environmentalists
are alarmed. “If Clinton plans to effectively tackle climate
change, the last thing her team needs is an industry insider like Ken
Salazar. Salazar’s track record illustrates time and again that he
is on the side of big industry, and not of the people,” Greenpeace
USA Democracy Campaign Director Molly Dorozenski said in a statement.
Salazar
currently works as partner at WilmerHale, a D.C.-based law and
lobbying firm. His clients are not public, but his firm lists his job
as giving “policy advice to national and international clients,
particularly on matters at the intersection of law, business and
public policy.” Staff at the firm have been involved in TPP
negotiations.
Members
of the presidential transition team are not required to disclose
their finances — meaning we may never know if and how much Salazar
is paid for all of the advocacy outside his salary at WilmerHale.
Salazar
has long been criticized for his connections to the industries he
regulates. For example, in a 2010 Salon post, Intercept co-founding
editor Glenn Greenwald highlighted Salazar’s connections to BP,
noting that “even as BP continues to spew oil in unfathomable
quantities into the Gulf,” Salazar was waiving environmental
reviews and approving new wells in the Gulf of Mexico.
Obama to take trade battle to the heartland
Tackling
campaign rhetoric from Hillary Clinton as well as Donald Trump,
administration officials are traveling the country to tout the deal’s
benefits
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