Liberal Democrats Blast Obamas New Auto Mandates

Mutiny: Even Liberals Blast the President width=184By Timothy H. Lee    Texas Insider Report: WASHINGTON D.C. For the dictatorial Obama Administration things are deteriorating from bad to borderline catastrophic. Its hardly news that Obamas support among political moderates and conservatives has gradually evaporated since his inauguration. But now even hard-core liberals are now warning him that he is simply going overboard.   Late last week the liberal Congressional delegation from Michigan that includes Senators Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow found itself compelled to write Obama and warn that his administrations behavior has become overly aggressive and not reasonably feasible." The occasion for their letter was the Obama Administrations announcement that it had managed to strong-arm the nations automakers into agreeing to draconian new mileage standards. Specifically those mandates will rise over 50 from the current 35.5 miles per gallon to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025. Now it would be one thing if liberals were complaining that Obamas behavior was insufficiently liberal. As insane as this may sound there are actually people out there freely walking our streets who consider the most liberal administration in American history not liberal enough. Just peruse the depths of the Daily Kos if you have the stomach. Such people truly seem to believe that what we need from Obama is more stimulus" spending more antagonism and even a unilateral debt increase unsupported by the text of the Constitution. But that isnt the case in this instance. Rather the Michigan delegation one of the nations most liberal expressed alarm that Obama has gone too far to the left. The letter dated July 21 2011 is notable for its blunt manner in criticizing the Obama Administrations tactics:
This issue if handled in the wrong way would have a negative effect on our economy stalling our economic recovery and would result in critical job losses with no benefit to the environment… An unsound program would width=128both negatively impact U.S. jobs and drive consumers to used car lots for vehicles that are less fuel efficient which would be a loss to environmental progress… Such a proposal would push beyond the limits of reasonably feasible technology development and would have significant negative ramifications for U.S. jobs and competitiveness. Technology and economics must reasonably support the targets and goals for fuel economy improvement and greenhouse gas emissions reductions and we are concerned that the Administrations current approach is not leading in that direction."
Independent analysis supports the delegations assertions. According to the Center for Automotive Research excessive government fuel mandates could add approximately $10000 to the average cost of a new car. And according to the Defour Group consulting organization the new fuel standard would eliminate some 220000 jobs. Moreover the new federal regulations could literally cost thousands of lives by forcing manufacturers to produce smaller lighter and more fragile cars. The National Academy of Sciences concluded that excessively stringent mileage mandates result in 1300 to 2600 additional deaths each year as well as many times that number of injuries from accidents. Additionally the Michigan delegation highlighted how Obamas new mandates would disproportionately harm domestic automakers vis--vis their foreign competitors:
More significantly we are concerned that the Administrations current approach for light duty trucks may have a discriminatory impact on these U.S. manufacturers. An approach to higher fuel economy that relies on the generation of credits from other than truck classes to reach compliance is not sustainable over the long-term and could have detrimental effects on U.S. automakers by expanding the gap between the regulatory width=150requirements and what is technologically and economically achievable. This approach will put an increasingly heavy burden on U.S. auto manufacturers who already must rely on credits earned for high fuel economy passenger cars to reach the aggressive fuel economy targets for light duty trucks in the regulatory requirements for model years 2012-2016 and may prevent them from selling these larger vehicles that U.S. consumers want to buy. Meanwhile manufacturers that produce primarily smaller vehicles will have an unfair competitive advantage and will still be able to sell these larger vehicles that are no more fuel efficient. In other words this has the potential to negate the significant reforms achieved by the Congress in 2007 that eliminated the discriminatory features of the old corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) system."
In remarkably pointed language the letter concludes by asking Obama to reassess his logic:
We need a balanced approach to fuel economy regulation with reasonable and achievable targets that will reduce our consumption of oil and greenhouse gas emissions while preserving U.S. jobs and promoting U.S. manufacturing. We do not believe the Administrations current proposal will achieve that balanced approach and believe instead it could have a detrimental effect on the U.S. economy. We urge you to reconsider further the Administrations thinking in these areas."
width=1width=157The fact that even liberals would criticize Obamas regulatory excess in such harsh terms leaves no doubt that his fuel mandates are unreasonable. Timothy H. Lee is vice president of legal and public affairs at the Center for Individual Freedom.
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