As predicted, the U.S. House of Representatives voted Friday to approve the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline, setting the stage for a U.S. Senate showdown next week and a potential presidential veto after that.
The vote played out largely along party lines in the House, with 262 members voting in favor of the legislation and 161 voting against. Thirty-one Democrats voted for the bill, which was introduced by Representative Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana).
The Senate is scheduled to vote on its Keystone companion bill on Tuesday. While Republicans were confident they had sufficient support going into Friday’s House vote, they are far less secure in the Senate.
Though all 45 Republicans are expected to vote “aye” and at least 13 Democrats have signaled they will support the bill, Newsweek reported Friday that the Senate “was still one vote shy of the 60 needed to overcome a filibuster, or blocking procedure, and pass a companion bill,” according to an aide to a Keystone supporter in that chamber.
Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu, who is co-sponsoring the Senate bill in the hopes it will help her win a run-off election against Cassidy in Louisiana next month, and other supporters of the pipeline “are racing to line up 60 votes in favor of the project,” Fuel Fix reported.
But environmentalists are calling on Landreiu’s Democratic colleagues to stand with President Barack Obama—who wants a State Department review to run its course and has said he would reject the pipeline if it accelerated climate change—and stand up to the fossil fuel industry.
“Sen. Mary Landrieu is a lost cause,” admitted Jamie Henn of 350.org. “She’s going to keep her head stuck in the Bayou just as long as the oil industry keeps writing the checks. But other politicians don’t have to follow suit. They’ve got the support they need to stand up to Big Oil and do the right thing. Voting no on Keystone XL would be a good start.”
Climate activists blasted the House vote and called on President Obama to reject the bill if it ends up on his desk.
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