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This article originally provided by
Yahoo
April 28, 2006
Bush Rejects Tax on Oil Companies' Profits
By TERENCE HUNT, AP White House
Correspondent
President Bush on Friday rejected calls by some lawmakers
for a tax on oil company windfall profits, saying the
industry should reinvest its recent gains into finding and
producing more energy.
"The temptation in Washington is to tax everything," Bush
said in an exchange with reporters in the White House Rose
Garden. "The answer is for there to be strong reinvestment
to make this country more secure from an energy
perspective."
With gasoline at over $3 a gallon in some areas, Bush
said there was "no evidence" of price-gouging of consumers.
Soaring gas prices have become a top political issue in
Congress in this midterm congressional election year. Bush
spoke a day after Exxon-Mobil, the nation's biggest oil
company, said its earnings climbed by 7 percent to $8.4
billion during the January-March period.
Bush said energy companies should use their increased
cash flows to build more natural gas pipelines, expand
refineries, explore "in environmentally friendly ways," and
invest in renewable sources of energy.
"That's what the American people expect. They also expect
to be treated fairly at the pump," he said. "These oil
prices are a wake-up call. We're dependent on oil. We need
to get off oil."
In a hastily arranged news conference to tout strong
economic growth figures, Bush also:
_Declared the national anthem should be sung in English —
not Spanish — in response to the recent release of a Spanish
language version. "And I think people who want to be a
citizen of this country ought to learn English and they
ought to learn to sing the national anthem in English," he
said.
_Endorsed yet again a temporary worker program as a way
to enforce border security.
_Rejected calls in Congress to abolish the Federal
Emergency Management Agency. "The lessons of Katrina are
important. We've learned a lot here at the federal level,"
Bush said. "We're much more ready this time than we were the
last time."
_Criticized the Sudanese government's thwarting of
efforts by the U.N. and other international organizations to
take a firmer control of fighting atrocities in the Darfur
region. "My message to them is we expect there to be full
compliance with the international desire for there to be
peace in the Darfur region," he said.
• Sidestepped a question on whether recent staff changes
at the White House could help reverse his slump in the
polls, saying, "We've got big challenges for this country,
and I've got a strategy to deal with them," he said.
• Said "the world is united and concerned" about Iran's
suspected desire to build nuclear weapons and that he will
work with other countries to achieve a diplomatic solution
to the crisis.
On surging oil prices and energy-industry profits, Bush
said it was "important for the people to understand that one
of the reasons why the price of gasoline is up is, there's
tight gasoline supplies. And one reason there's tight
gasoline supplies is, we haven't built any new refineries
since the 1970s."
Bush, a former Texas oilman, said Congress needs to
provide regulatory relief so refineries can be expanded and
new ones built.
"So it's a combination of people investing the cash
flows, as well as regulatory relief, to enhance the ability
for people to achieve the objective, which is more gasoline
on the market which will help our consumers," he said.
The president announced a series of steps earlier this
week designed to slightly ease upward pressure on gasoline
prices, including temporarily halting the filling of the
government's emergency petroleum reserve and easing
environmental standards on gasoline additives.
He also asked the Federal Trade Commission to look into
whether price-gouging was going on.
"I have no evidence that there's any rip off taking
place, but it's the role of the Federal Trade Commission to
assure me that my inclination and instinct is right," he
told reporters.
It's up to the FTC "to assure the American people that
they're being treated fairly at the pump," he added.
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