American Minimum Wage Earners Held Hostage Over Keystone XL

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One of the biggest political issues facing the United States right now is economic inequality and the fight for a fairer minimum wage.ย  Unfortunately for American workers, that fight is being held up by another political fight that isnโ€™t quite as large in scale, but it has some powerful proponents in the dirty energy industry. That project, of course, is the northern half of the Keystone XLย Pipeline.

Just a few weeks ago, President Obama announced an extended review period for the pipeline, which would allow him to make a decision after this yearโ€™s high-stakes midterm elections.ย  That announcement was not joyful news to proponents of the pipeline, and theyโ€™ve now decided to tie the project into an issue that is very dear to many Americansย โ€”ย raising the minimumย wage.

Last week, Tom Cole, a Republican representative from Oklahoma, told MSNBC that he would consider voting in favor of raising the federal minimum wage if Democrats in the House would approve the Keystone XL pipeline (video here).ย  Rep. Coleโ€™s top donor industry over the course of his decade-long career in the U.S. House of Representatives has been the oil and gasย industry.ย 

Cole says that โ€œthereโ€™s always a potential for compromiseโ€ with his Democratic colleagues in the House, and approving something the Republicans want in exchange for something the Democrats want is how the game is played in Washington, D.C.ย 

But Coleโ€™s comments go beyond the typical tit-for-tat deals that take place inside the beltway, and he is entering extortion territory by making these claims in the media, rather than to his colleagues on the Houseย floor.

Coleโ€™s contention is that the Keystone XL pipeline will create jobs, while raising the minimum wage will destroy jobs, so overall, itโ€™s a wash in his mind.ย  Both of those assertions have been thoroughly debunked.

Cole represents the Houseโ€™s take on the pipeline, and things arenโ€™t much different over in the Senate, as Roll Call points out:

Senate Republican leaders plan to filibuster President Barack Obamaโ€™s proposal to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour when it comes up for an initial test vote Wednesday, and are pushing for a vote soon on the Keystone XL pipelineย instead.

โ€œCloture will not be invoked,โ€ said Senate Minority Whip John Cornyn,ย R-Texas.

But Republicans in Congress arenโ€™t the only ones trying to use Keystone XL to hold our political systems hostage โ€” the oil industry itself is getting in on the action with a full-on assault on ourย elections.ย 

The American Petroleum Institute (API) has rolled out a new series of radio and TV ads in states where Democrats are up for re-election, charging that they are holding up progress on the Keystone XL pipeline.ย  Their goal is to coerce, through threat of electoral defeat, these vulnerable Democrats into voting in favor of the project, should it come up for a vote inย Congress.

And the ads are just the start of the coercion, according to The Hill:

The petroleum institute said it’s using every tool in its arsenal to build support forย Keystone.

โ€œWe are certainly going to use up all of our outreach options at this point,โ€ said Cindy Schild, the group’s downstream operations manager for refining and oil sands. โ€œWe want to convince and show senators that their constituents want them to do the rightย thing.โ€

And if you think that President Obama isnโ€™t using the Keystone XL project for political gain, you’d be gravely mistaken.ย  His decision to delay a final verdict on the pipeline allows the Democratic Party the opportunity to do two things.ย  The first is to court dirty energy industry money to help fund reelection campaigns ahead of the November election.ย  The second is to allow his party to remain neutral ahead of the elections, so that dirty energy money doesnโ€™t favor the Republican side more thanย usual.ย 

The entire situation is growing increasingly pathetic.ย  All of the available research tells us that the pipeline will be a drain on our economy, it will do nothing to spur job growth, and it will only increase the United Statesโ€™ dependence on foreign oil, raise our fuel pricesย and contribute to climate change. ย 

But our elected officials donโ€™t care about those facts, they only care about where the money for their next campaign will comeย from.

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Farron Cousins is the executive editor of The Trial Lawyer magazine, and his articles have appeared on The Huffington Post, Alternet, and The Progressive Magazine. He has worked for the Ring of Fire radio program with hosts Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Mike Papantonio, and Sam Seder since August 2004, and is currently the co-host and producer of the program. He also currently serves as the co-host of Ring of Fire on Free Speech TV, a daily program airing nightly at 8:30pm eastern. Farron received his bachelor's degree in Political Science from the University of West Florida in 2005 and became a member of American MENSA in 2009.ย  Follow him on Twitterย @farronbalanced.

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