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Opinion

A jobs-killing lie

For all his John Wayne rhetoric on the BP oil spill, President Obama has failed to administer a swift kick to the rump of Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. No matter. Federal judge Martin Feldman has now done the job the White House won’t do.

In a scathing ruling issued yesterday, New Orleans-based Feldman overturned the administration’s radical six-month moratorium on deepwater drilling — and he singled out Salazar’s central role in jury-rigging a federal panel’s scientific report to bolster flagrantly politicized conclusions. In a sane world, Salazar’s head would roll. In Obama’s world, he gets immunity.

The suit challenging Obama’s desperately political ban was filed by Covington, La., rig company Hornbeck Offshore Services, which spoke on behalf of all the “small people” in the industry whose economic survival is at stake. As the plaintiffs’ lawyer argued in court, the overbroad ban promised to be more devastating to Gulf workers than the spill itself. “This is an unprecedented industry-wide shutdown. Never before has the government done this,” attorney Carl Rosenblum said.

Scientists who served on the committee expressed outrage upon discovering earlier this month that Salazar had — unilaterally and without warning — inserted a blanket drilling-ban recommendation into their report. In fact, seven panelists explicitly opposed a blanket ban as “punishing the innocent.”

As Feldman recounted in his ruling: “In the Executive Summary to the Report, [Salazar] recommends ‘a six-month moratorium on permits for new wells being drilled using floating rigs.’ He also recommends “an immediate halt to drilling operations on the 33 permitted wells . . . that are currently being drilled using floating rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.’

“Much to the government’s discomfort and this Court’s uneasiness, the Summary also states that ‘the recommendations contained in this report have been peer-reviewed by seven experts identified by the National Academy of Engineering.’ As the plaintiffs, and the experts themselves, pointedly observe, this statement was misleading. The experts charge it was a ‘misrepresentation.’ It was factually incorrect.”

Allow me to be more injudicious: Salazar lied. And for what purpose? To exploit the Gulf crisis AND appease the eco-extremists.

The scientists whose views were misrepresented reportedly received an apology from the evidence-doctoring Salazar, but where are the consequences? Where is the accountability?

Yesterday, Salazar said that Michael Bromwich, who’ll head the new “Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement” (previously the Minerals Management Service) “will be a key part of our team as we continue to change the way the Department of the Interior does business.” Present company exempted, of course.

Feldman soberly illuminated the way the Interior Department does business in concluding that Salazar’s “invalid agency decision to suspend drilling of wells in depths of over 500 feet simply cannot justify the immeasurable effect on the plaintiffs, the local economy, the Gulf region and the critical present-day aspect of the availability of domestic energy in this country.”

Salazar, with his boss’s blessing, imposed the blanket moratorium without a shred of threat/safety analysis. Of course, Hope and Change have always been exercised with Arbitrary and Capricious power.

The White House immediately announced plans to appeal the ruling. But for once, it has run smack into the rule of law and lost. For all the other small people over whom the administration has run roughshod, let’s hope it sets a precedent.