Pump up the volume
Gas prices provide Gore and Bush with a perfect issue for
populist pronouncements. A pity the causes are too complex to
fix real blame
By RON STODGHILL II/CHICAGO
June 26, 2000
Web posted at: 7:50 p.m. EDT (2350 GMT)
O.K., so suburban mom Beth Ball, 34, may not have been cast on
Survivor, but the Villa Park, Ill., resident is feeling pretty
close to the subsistence level these days. Ball owns a 1999 Ford
Econoline van but has to keep it parked, she says, because gas
prices are so outrageously high. A few days ago, she shelled out
$90 to fill her tank. It's still full, as if the fuel were a
nest egg. To commute to work, she borrows her husband's Pontiac
Grand Am. For errands, she walks. "I don't drive anywhere as
much as I used to," Ball says. "I can't afford it."
This was supposed to be the political dry season, the
lowest-attention days of a campaign season with few or no
cutting issues. But at some point last week, a jump ball was
thrown. Maybe it was the steady rumble of outrage expressed by
Beth Ball and millions of other Americans as gas prices inched
over $2.30 a gal. in some cities. Maybe it was the 100th news
story or angry call to a radio show. Whatever it was, the issue
became the one for both presidential candidates to grab hold of.
It has become clear to Al Gore and George W. Bush that the man
who can gain the advantage on the summer's first hot political
issue could set the pace for the rest of the campaign.
Since perception is more important than reality in this case,
there's one thing neither Gore nor Bush is likely to admit
anytime soon. In relative terms, gas prices are not that high.
At this moment in the presidential race, however, the only thing
that matters is that gas prices feel high to Americans, who have
been guzzling freely for more than a decade now. And that's what
makes this issue more potent than, say, Social Security, which
had been the scheduled debating point for last week. Outrage is
bubbling up, not from policy wonks and interest groups but
directly from citizens who haven't been heard from in a while.
Voters are increasingly dumbfounded by the sharp spike in prices
at a time when there is no obvious cause, like a disruption in
supply. With a summer of driving vacations on the way, they are
likely to stay angry and keep pressing for answers. Restless
votes like these, many of which happen to appear in critical
Midwestern states where gas prices are highest, are the kind
that turn elections.
As a result, Gore and Bush spent much of last week playing a
furious round of the blame game. Gore's camp, for good reason,
is worried that its man could become a fall guy in an economic
downturn. Still, it figures that rising gas prices provide the
Vice President with a two-pronged if somewhat risky shot at
Bush: blast the oil companies for milking the consumer, then
staple Bush to their greasy lapels, painting him as a shill of
Big Oil whose tight money connections all but implicate him in
gouging consumers. Said Gore during a speech: "It's time to put
our feet on the brakes of what may well be Big Oil's price
gouging."
Bush's campaign was swift in firing back, blaming the rise in
prices on the Administration's domestic energy policy as well as
Gore's crusade for stringent clean-air fuel, which is at the
center of fast-rising fuel prices in the Midwest. At a
well-scripted press conference last week, when asked about the
increases and the suggestion that Bush's oil ties made him a
culprit, the Governor replied, "There seems to be an effort out
of Washington to blame me for rising energy prices. I am amazed
that they're trying to shift the blame away from people that are
holding the office." Then Bush took out a copy of a book by
Gore, its pages clearly earmarked for handy referral. "I don't
know if anybody's read Earth in the Balance," Bush said, and he
slid on his glasses and read aloud a passage in which Gore said
that while the public opposed raising taxes on fossil fuels,
raising them was the right policy. "In other words," Bush said,
"he writes in a book that he thinks we ought to have higher fuel
prices...Now that he's running for President, he seems to be
changing his tune."
Everyone is under pressure. Perhaps prodded by Washington, OPEC,
which had been hesitant about putting new crude on the market,
last week announced it would try to drive down U.S. prices by
goosing up production. Some state pols, enjoying budget
surpluses, have vowed to give drivers a break by suspending the
gas sales tax for a couple of months. It's not quite altruism.
"If gas prices were to stay at today's rates for the next year,
Indiana could lose 17,000 jobs," says Governor Frank O'Bannon.
The Federal Trade Commission, pressed by the likes of O'Bannon,
is set to subpoena heads of the major U.S. oil companies to
grill them about possible antitrust violations and price
gouging. If consumers are impressed by this, energy experts are
not. They say that while a probe might make for good TV, the
exercise isn't likely to turn up much. Ken Medlock, a fellow at
the Baker Institute for Public Policy at Rice University, puts
it this way: "I think it was a good step politically to get the
FTC involved, but I don't really think it's a question of price
gouging."
In fact, price gouging may be too simple an answer. U.S. gas
prices, experts say, have risen because of a complicated blend
of global politics, increased consumer demand and a greener U.S.
energy policy. Back in 1998, in response to a worldwide glut in
crude oil, OPEC restricted production at the same time the
strong U.S. economy was seducing ever more Americans into
gas-guzzling trucks and suvs. For beleaguered oil companies,
strong volume at the pump has been the only crutch supporting
comparatively low gas prices caused by the glut.
Prices in the already sensitive gasoline market began to jump
last year with new epa clean-air regulations. A major culprit
has been reformulated gasoline designed to reduce pollution in
the smoggy Chicago-Milwaukee corridor. Although better for the
environment, supplies of this specialized "microbrew" have been
erratic, causing some pricing spikes. The gas that the rest of
the country uses can't be remixed to resupply the micromarket of
the Midwest. That short supply is aggravated by a damaged oil
pipeline crucial to supplying the region's refineries. The
result: higher prices.
Surely Gore understands all this, but the urge to paint Bush as
a poster boy for Big Oil has been irresistible. The picture
isn't hard to paint. Bush campaign chairman Don Evans is also
chairman of oil company Tom Brown Inc. and has seen his stock
rise 73% since January. The oil and gas companies have
contributed $1.5 million to Bush, versus $95,000 to Gore. All
his campaigns dating back to 1978 have been bankrolled by oil
money. And in his unsuccessful 1978 congressional race, Bush
declared, "There's no such thing as being too closely aligned to
the oil business in West Texas."
However, it may not be difficult for Bush to make Gore the first
name people curse when they fill up their tanks this summer.
After all, the Vice President is on his "Prosperity and
Progress" tour, taking credit for America's unprecedented
expansion--and implicitly all that goes with it. "This is a huge
liability for Gore," says Bill Paxon, former New York
Congressman who is now a Bush adviser. "The current situation is
an example of what kind of energy and economic policy he'd
pursue. It's one thing to talk about it in the abstract and to
write it in a book, but now it's affecting people's pocketbooks."
As the candidates point their fingers, the one thing those at
the pump don't have to worry about is taking any of the blame.
Gore and Bush aren't going to make anyone feel guilty about
lining up at the suv dealership or tossing out their commitment
to car pools. Both pols know that's the kind of talk that could
really ruin a summer vacation. --Reported by Jay Branegan,
Jay Carney and John F. Dickerson/Washington, and Maggie
Sieger/Chicago
--Reported by Jay Branegan,
Jay Carney and John F. Dickerson/Washington, and Maggie
Sieger/Chicago
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