Two Senate Republicans are now blocking a confirmation vote for three of President Donald Trump’s nominees to positions in the U.S. Treasury Department in protest of one of the administration’s newest policies.
Politico’s Kelsey Tamborino and Josh Siegel reported Monday that Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and John Curtis (R-Utah) are now holding up votes for Treasury Department general counsel Brian Morissey, assistant Treasury Secretary Francis Brooke and Treasury Department undersecretary Jonathan McKernan. According to Politico, Grassley and Curtis are blocking the officials’ confirmation to protect lucrative solar and wind energy projects in their states. And they’re apparently not the only Senate Republicans willing to go to the mat for those projects.
“The pair, alongside other GOP senators, have escalated their pressure on the Trump administration in recent days to back off its efforts to strangle new solar and wind energy projects, warning that potential cancellations would make it harder to meet growing power demand,” Tamborino and Siegel wrote.
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One part of Trump’s massive new tax and spending law is the repealing of renewable energy investments made possible by former President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act. As New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman detailed last month, the legislation will “kneecap America’s renewable energy industry” while making China the de facto world leader in green energy technology.
In July, Trump issued an executive order instructing the Treasury Department to “strictly enforce” provisions in the new law that end tax credits for renewable energy development, which would be the responsibility of the Treasury officials Curtis and Grassley are blockading. The order also specified when a project was said to have begun construction, which Grassley said goes against what Congress has already passed.
“What it means for a project to ‘begin construction’ has been well established by Treasury guidance for more than a decade. Moreover, Congress specifically references current Treasury guidance to set that term’s meaning in law,” the Iowa Republican said in the Congressional Record. “This is a case where both the law and congressional intent are clear.”
According to Politico, the tax and spending law defunds all projects slated to start generating power after 2027. Several Republicans fought for compromise language that was included in the final bill that allowed more time for renewable energy projects beginning construction in the next six months.
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Click here to read Politico’s full report.