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Trump uses energy speech to outline general election pitch

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump acknowledges the crowd after giving an energy speech at the Williston Basin Petroleum Conference today in Bismarck, N.D.

BISMARCK, N.D. » Presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump unveiled an “America first” energy plan he said would unleash unfettered production of oil, coal, natural gas and other energy sources to push the United States toward energy independence.

But the speech, delivered at the annual Williston Basin Petroleum Conference in Bismarck, North Dakota, went far beyond energy, as Trump laid out, in his most detail to date, a populist general election pitch against likely rival Hillary Clinton.

“She’s declared war on the American worker,” Trump said of Clinton, reading from prepared remarks in a stadium packed with thousands.

Trump delivered the policy address just hours after The Associated Press determined he had won the number of delegates needed to clinch the Republican presidential nomination. He focused on coal, in particular, to help make his case against Clinton, his likely Democratic opponent in the general election.

In March, Clinton said, “We’re going to put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business.” She has since walked back the remark, calling it “a misstatement” and outlining a plan to help displaced coal workers.

Trump said today he would do everything he could “free up the coal” and bring back thousands of coal jobs lost amid steep competition from cheaper natural gas and regulations designed to cut air pollution and reduce greenhouse gases blamed for global warming.

“They love it,” Trump said of those who work in coal mines. “We’re going to bring it back and we’re going to help those people because that’s what they want to do.”

The comment marked a shift from a remark Trump made in a 1990 interview with Playboy Magazine, when he compared his career in real estate to “the story of the coal miner’s son.”

“The coal miner gets black-lung disease. His son gets it, then his son. If I had been the son of a coal miner, I would have left the damn mines,” he told Playboy. “But most people don’t have the imagination — or whatever — to leave their mine.”

Asked Thursday about the Playboy comment, Trump responded in an email. “I never had the imagination to leave the real estate industry, until I recently decided to make America great again,” he said. “We tend to follow up our father’s footsteps, and that’s the lifestyle we want, even if it’s tougher than other alternatives. … Being a coal miner is really tough, but that’s what they love and unlike Hillary Clinton, I am going to make sure they have they have their jobs for many years to come.”

Trump also promised Thursday to cancel the Paris climate agreement and stop all payments of U.S. tax money to a United Nations fund to mitigate effects of climate change worldwide.

He is among many Republicans who reject mainstream climate science. He has called climate change a “con job” and a “hoax” and suggested it is a Chinese plot “to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.”

He accused President Barack Obama of doing “everything he can to get in the way of American energy.”

Trump’s comments were out of step with an ongoing oil boom that has raised U.S. production to record level and cut gas prices to about $2.30 per gallon. The United States has been the world’s top producer of petroleum and natural gas for the last four years, according to the Energy Department.

Since Obama took office in 2009, U.S. onshore crude oil production has increased by nearly 90 percent.

Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club, said Trump’s “so-called energy plan” was “an unmitigated disaster. It’s clear that Donald Trump would bankrupt our air, water and climate just like he’s bankrupted his businesses.”

Brune called Trump a climate-change denier and said “his fossil fuel comeback plan is a dirty fantasy disconnected from economic realities and our moral imperative to transition to clean energy. There are open pools of oil in North Dakota right now that are deeper than Trump’s understanding of energy issues.”

North Dakota is at the heart of America’s oil boom and now is the second largest oil-producing state after Texas, thanks largely to huge reserves in the oil-rich Bakken region and advances in fracking and other drilling technology.

Despite his political position on climate, there is evidence Trump the businessman is moving to hedge his bets.

Earlier this month, one of Trump’s companies specifically cited sea level rise and increased storminess fueled by global warming in paperwork seeking permission to build a nearly two-mile-long stone wall to fortify the shoreline at one of his golf courses in Ireland.

9 responses to “Trump uses energy speech to outline general election pitch”

  1. postmanx says:

    “Since Obama took office in 2009, U.S. onshore crude oil production has increased by nearly 90 percent.” Just wanted to thank our Hawaiian born president for hastening the end of the world as we know it.

    • lespark says:

      Seriously, do you think America is the only country? Try India, China, Russia etc.

    • Winston says:

      Private capital and initiative created the oil boom through fracking in spite of Obama, not because of it. It’s as though his diehard supporters give him credit for the sun coming up in the east— wait, no, seriously, it would have risen every single day without him.

  2. justmyview371 says:

    It isn’t lack of imagination of coal miners in Wyoming and West Virginia. It’s lack of other jobs, or at least good jobs, they are qualified/trained for in those areas.

  3. lespark says:

    Unite the Party? Paul Ryan is a joke. He better wise up or he will not unify the Party and be left at the Station.

  4. kuroiwaj says:

    Trump’s position to approve the Keystone Pipeline and even improving the agreement will gain support from the Laborers, Teamsters, and Operator Engineers who build all America and Canada’s oil and gas pipelines.

    • klastri says:

      This is the sad fact regarding Trump supporters. The Keystone pipeline cannot be built because there isn’t any money in it anymore, but the gullible don’t understand Economics 101. They also don’t understand that it’s getting harder and harder to sell coal because no one knows how to handle the ash slurry it creates, and that it’s much more difficult to handle than natural gas. Again, the poorly educated and gullible think that Mr. Trump can magically create markets where none exist.

      It’s sad to read comments like this.

      • sarge22 says:

        A nice plan to make America great again. President Donald Trump will do a GREAT job. With the price of oil going up the pipeline will be easily affordable once the government and Soros gets out of the way. The poorly educated and gullible are much smarter then the over educated clueless poli sci folks. Live with it.

        • klastri says:

          Yes, of course. Being well educated is a big disadvantage. Who doesn’t know that?

          You are quite the thinker!

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