Harris supported the Green New Deal. Now she’s promoting domestic oil drilling
Even as she promoted her efforts to boost clean energy, Vice President Kamala Harris said in Tuesday’s debate that the Democratic administration has overseen “the largest increase in domestic oil production in history because of an approach that recognizes that we cannot over rely on foreign oil.”
The comment by Harris, a longtime climate hawk who backed the original Green New Deal, surprised supporters and opponents alike — and conflicted with frequent boasts by Harris and President Biden that they are champions in the fight to slow global warming.
When Donald Trump was president, he withdrew the U.S. from the Paris agreement on climate change, but the Biden-Harris administration reentered the global pact aimed at reducing emissions. The administration also set a target to slash U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2030 and moved to accelerate renewable energy projects and shift away from fossil fuels.
Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist, said it was notable that at a debate in energy-rich Pennsylvania, Harris chose to “brag about something that President Biden has barely acknowledged — that domestic fossil fuel production under the Biden administration is at an all-time high.”
Crude production averaged 12.9 million barrels a day last year, eclipsing a previous record set in 2019 under Trump, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
The statement was “another sign of Harris’ sprint to the middle” on energy and other issues, said Donovan, who works with energy industry clients at the Bracewell law and lobbying firm.
Harris went one step further, rebranding the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act — the administration’s signature climate law — as a boon to fracking and other drilling, thanks to lease-sale requirements added to the bill by independent West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin III, a key swing vote in the Senate and a strong supporter of the fossil fuel industry.
Harris’ comments disappointed some in the environmental community.
“Harris missed a critical opportunity to lay out a stark contrast with Trump and show young voters that she will stand up to Big Oil and stop the climate crisis,” said Stevie O’Hanlon, a spokesperson for the Sunrise Movement, one of the groups behind the Green New Deal.
“Harris spent more time promoting fracking than laying out a bold vision for a clean energy future,” O’Hanlon said. “Young voters want more from Harris” on climate change, she added. “We want to see a real plan that meets the scale and urgency of this crisis.”
The group is working to turn out young voters, “but we hear people asking every day, ‘What are Democrats going to do for us?’” O’Hanlon said. “To win, Harris needs to show young people she will fight for us.”
Other environmental groups were less critical, citing the threat to climate action posed by Trump, who rolled back more than 100environmental protections when he was in office.
“There is only one presidential candidate who is a champion for climate action, and that is Kamala Harris,” said Alex Glass, speaking for Climate Power, a liberal advocacy group. Harris “laid out a clear vision to invest in clean energy jobs and lower costs for working families,” Glass added.
By comparison, she said, Trump “will do the bidding of his Big Oil donors.”
Glass cited the conservative Project 2025, written by Trump allies, saying it would put millions of clean energy jobs at risk and let oil companies “profiteer and pollute.” Trump has denied a direct connection to Project 2025, though it was written by many of his allies and former aides and he has endorsed some of its key ideas.
Mike Sommers, head of the American Petroleum Institute, the oil and gas industry’s top lobbying group, said Harris’ comment in support of fracking reflected political reality in the closely contested election. “You have to be for fracking to be elected president in 2024,” he said. “That’s good news for our industry and great news for American consumers.”
Asked why he was so confident about the need to support fracking, he answered: “Pennsylvania.”
It’s not only a key swing state in the election, but also “the beating heart of the natural gas industry in this country,” Sommers said, and second only to Texas in total production.
“You don’t win Pennsylvania without supporting fracking, and you don’t win the presidency without Pennsylvania,” he said.
In the debate, Trump disputed Harris’ claim that she will not try to ban fracking, but Sommers said he takes Harris at her word and welcomes her support for fracking and oil drilling more generally.
Asked whether he was concerned about Harris’ past actions suing oil companies, Sommers said no. The oil and gas industry supports 11 million jobs, he said, and the price of gasoline “is determined by economics — supply and demand. There is no man behind the curtain” rigging prices.
As California attorney general, Harris “won tens of millions in settlements against Big Oil and held polluters accountable,” her campaign says. Her platform includes a promise to “hold polluters accountable to secure clean air and water for all.”
Trump, meanwhile, has vowed to rescind unspent funds from the climate law and other programs, and said he would target offshore wind projects. He said Harris would move to restrict onshore oil and gas production if elected.
“They’ll go back to destroying our country, and oil will be dead, fossil fuel will be dead,” Trump said.
A president’s power to restrict fracking, even on federal lands, is limited, and barring the practice on private land would require an act of Congress.
Jamie Henn, director of the activist group Fossil Free Media, supports a fracking ban, but said he was “not particularly worried about Harris having to thread the needle on fracking and other energy issues.”
“Her job right now is to get elected,” Henn wrote on the social media site X. “That’s the most important ‘policy’ on climate and everything else. [There will] be plenty of time to push her when she’s in office.”
Daly writes for the Associated Press.
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