Dems go on the attack during EPA chief’s hearing

Democratic senators wasted no time Tuesday hounding the head of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over his regulatory rollbacks and potential ulterior motives at the agency.

Amid relentless questioning during the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing, Democrats used all tools at their disposal, including audio, in an effort to challenge the EPA’s Scott Pruitt on most of his policy decisions and promises since becoming administrator almost a year ago.

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Tom Carper (D-Del.), the ranking member, set the tone early on by thanking Pruitt for making his first appearance at the committee, before critiquing him for taking so long to do so.

“I’d note for the record that your immediate predecessor, Gina McCarthy, appeared before this committee six times in two years, while her predecessor, Lisa Jackson, appeared before us 14 times in six years. You can do better on this front and it’s important that you do,” Carper said.

Other members challenged Pruitt on recent changes the EPA made to its clean air policy and its plans for toxic chemical cleanup. EPA’s new air policy lets some polluting facilities no longer be subject to strict rules for ‘major’ sources of emissions.

Pruitt recently announced a “war on lead,” pointing to the Obama administration’s failure to prevent the Flint water crisis as an example of an area President Trump’s administration could do better.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) said Pruitt’s so-called war didn’t hold water. “Unfortunately your rhetoric does not match your actions — your administration would make it harder, not easier, to limit lead exposure,” she said.

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Duckworth additionally criticized Pruitt’s recent trip to Morocco, where it was reported that he negotiated sales of natural gas.

“I don’t understand what the sale of natural gas has to do with the EPA’s mission,” Duckworth told Pruitt, before adding that perhaps it was something that he would do if he were running for the governor of his home state, Oklahoma.

Pruitt promised the committee that he was “committed to performing the work that is necessary to meet our mission of protecting human health and the environment.” He added that there remained “important challenges left to tackle,” speaking specifically about his areas of recent focus, which include cleaning up Superfund sites.

While Democrats hit Pruitt with question after question, most failed to land any real blows as the EPA chief resisted answering a number of questions directly.

Senators pressed Pruitt to answer only yes or no questions. But the administrator, who has a background as a prosecutor, largely avoided being held to short answers. 

In one striking moment, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) added to the record audio of Pruitt in 2016 saying he considered Trump “abusive” to the constitution.

Unprepared, Pruitt said he didn’t remember saying those things. 

Shortly after the hearing, Pruitt released a statement reaffirming his positive thoughts of the president.

“After meeting him, and now having the honor of working for him, it is abundantly clear that President Trump is the most consequential leader of our time.  No one has done more to advance the rule of law than President Trump. The President has liberated our country from the political class and given America back to the people,” he said in the statement.

The questioning style on the other side of the aisle was a stark contrast. 

Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) greeted Pruitt by first saying “I get the impression they don’t like you.” Inhofe then commended Pruitt’s EPA for the economic benefits the agency created from cutting regulations.

Sen. John Boozman (R-Ark.) asked Pruitt how false claims about the EPA might “hurt morale.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) credited the EPA’s rollback of the Clean Water Act, also known as the Waters of the U.S. (WOTUS) rule, for dropping unemployment in her state.

“Under your leadership EPA has taken back necessary actions to walk back destruction Obama era rules—like WOTUS and the Clean Power Plan,” Ernst told Pruitt.

Tags air clean air Donald Trump Environment EPA Gina McCarthy Jim Inhofe John Boozman Joni Ernst Lead Science Scott Pruitt Sheldon Whitehouse Superfund Tammy Duckworth Tom Carper Water

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