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Security

Rep. Dan Lungren’s Chemical Facilities Legislation Endangers Constituents To Terrorist Attack

Rep. Dan Lungren (R-CA) meets with top chemical producer lobbyist Larry Sloan

After serving as the California attorney general and a lobbyist for the firm Venable, Rep. Dan Lungren (R-CA) decided to run again for Congress in 2004, claiming that the War on Terrorism had drawn him back into public service. “If 9/11 had not occurred, I would not be running,” he told reporters at the time.

This year, Lungren became chairman of a key anti-terrorism subcommittee that oversees the nation’s infrastructure and technology security. Tasked with protecting vulnerable chemical manufacturing plants from a terrorist attack, Lungren’s main legislative accomplishment has been the shepherding of the Chemical Facilities Anti-Terrorism Standards (CFATS) through committee. However, many are arguing that the bill is laden with loopholes for the chemical industry. Large-scale chemical companies, like Koch Industries, have lobbied against expensive requirements to use less dangerous chemicals and to let the Department of Homeland Security set certain safety standards. Lungren’s bill, as critics have detailed, extends reckless loopholes for chemical companies while exempting many water treatment plants from post-9/11 safety rules.

As Homeland Security officials have warned for years, an explosion at a chemical plant remains one of the most lethal terrorism risks for the nation. A Center for American Progress report, Chemical Security 101, details the dangers posed by unsecured chemical facilities across the nation. Notably, there is at least one chemical plant within proximity of Lungren’s district:

– The General Chemical Bay Point Works in Pittsburg, California is a chemical manufacturing facility produces high purity electronic grade hydrofluoric acid (concentration 49% to 70%) for use in semiconductor and silicon manufacturing industries. An explosion or attack at this plant would endanger the lives of up to 3 million people in the Sacramento and Bay Area.

Lungren led House Homeland Security Committee Republicans in voting to kill amendments that would have closed security loopholes and required safer chemicals at the General Chemical Bay Point plant near his district.

Though he promised to return to Congress to keep the country safe from terrorism, Lungren’s primary accomplishment is a giveaway to chemical companies more interested in short-term profit than protecting the lives of Americans.

Update

This post originally stated that the Dry Creek Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant in Roseville, near Lungren’s district, uses dangerous chemicals. This plant recently converted to safer chemicals. We regret the error.

Politics

Rep. Dan Lungren Challenged By Constituent For His Oath To Grover Norquist, A Corporate Lobbyist

ThinkProgress filed this report from Carmichael, California.

On Wednesday, a constituent in a town hall meeting challenged Rep. Dan Lungren (R-CA) about his loyalty to Grover Norquist, an anti-tax activist and noted corporate lobbyist. Politicians who sign Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform pledge, a popular commitment among Republicans, promise never to vote for anything designated as a tax increase by Norquist’s organization.

During the meeting, held in the Sacramento suburb of Carmichael, a young woman asked Lungren why he took Norquist’s pledge when he should only pledge an “oath of office to the Constitution.” Lungren seemed dazzled, and first misinterpreted the comment as an accusation that he opposes the Constitution. The constituent asked the question again, only to hear Lungren sneer that she hasn’t “been reading the newspapers.” A few in the crowd yelled “answer the question!”:

CONSTITUENT: How are we supposed to feel safe if you’ve gone around taking pledges for everybody instead of just staying with the pledge to the Constitution?

LUNGREN: If you’re surprised that I’m not for more taxes, then you haven’t been reading the newspapers. I’ve never changed my position on that. [...] Next question.

Watch it:

Norquist’s pledge is a thinly disguised political gimmick to provide cover for politicians seeking to protect corporate loopholes and other giveaways to the rich in the tax code. In Norquist’s world, even a vote to end ethanol subsidies is a terrible tax hike.

While Lungren has not shied away from supporting Norquist, a longtime corporate lobbyist, the relationship may turn out to harm the congressman’s image. Lungren, himself a former lobbyist, has a history of his own lobbying controversies, including the sponsorship of a new chemical facilities bill, seen by critics as a giveaway to companies reluctant to comply with anti-terrorism regulations. Many in the town hall audience that night, even some Lungren supporters, asked questions about the undue influence of special interests and powerful corporations like GE.

Last week, ThinkProgress reported on a town hall in upstate New York in which a constituent accused Rep. Chris Gibson (R-NY) of being a “slave” to the Norquist pledge.

NEWS FLASH

Constituents Jeer Rep. Dan Lungren’s (R-CA) Support Of Bush Tax Cuts For The Rich | At a town hall last Wednesday attended by ThinkProgress, Rep. Dan Lungren (R-CA) was asked why he supports the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy since America has lost millions of jobs since its passage. When Lungren deflected, saying that everyone benefits from the Bush tax cuts and that Obama supported extending them, several people began jeering him. Lungren, who at one point threatened to leave the Carmichael town hall, said he doesn’t know of any economists who support raising taxes during a recession. Ironically, that same day the National Association for Business Economics released a study showing nearly three quarters of business economists stating they support raising revenues through taxes:

LUNGREN: Obama extended the tax cuts for several more years [...]

CONSTITUENT: You use the deficit ceiling to blackmail! That’s what you did. [...]

LUNGREN: I know of no economists who suggest we ought to raise taxes in the midst of a down turn in the economy.

Watch it:

Politics

Lungren Praises Ryan’s Budget Plan Privatizing Social Security As ‘The Best,’ But Hesitates To Endorse It

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI), the ranking member of the Budget Committee and incoming chairman if Republicans capture the House in November, has a budget plan called “America’s Roadmap.” Right-wing pundits have applauded the plan, calling it “bold,” but reporters have noted that few Republicans have been willing to go on the record and actually cosponsor the legislation.

Yesterday at a town hall in Carmichael, California, a constituent got up and told Rep. Dan Lungren (R-CA) that she had visited the America’s Roadmap website after Lungren had told her at a previous town hall to visit it to see how Republicans would operate differently than the current Congress. She said she was unimpressed, and, as someone who “watches Fox News all day,” she wanted to see Tea Party principles of eliminating “almost everything” the federal government does. Lungren largely sidestepped her comment, and told the audience that he would promote national defense but cut spending for bicycle trails. After the town hall, ThinkProgress approached Lungren — who has not cosponsored Ryan’s budget — for clarification:

TP: Well, what about the Roadmap?

LUNGREN: The Paul Ryan Roadmap is, that is the best long term look at trying to deal with our fiscal insanity right now that anybody has done. But that doesn’t mean I would sign on to everything. Paul Ryan would probably look for some changes. But no one else has had the courage to try to come forward with a comprehensive approach, that’s what I said.

TP: But when you talk about “courage,” you haven’t cosponsored the Roadmap even though you’re endorsing it now. Would you endorse it before the election and cosponsor the bill?

LUNGREN: I don’t know.

Watch it:

Lungren tried to remain coy about many of his policy positions. Asked by another person at the town hall if he would sign onto a bill to repeal the Wall Street reform law passed by Congress earlier this year, he said he would “consider” it.

There is a reason why Republicans have tried to hide their support for the Ryan budget. The budget plan privatizes Social Security, creates a privatized-style voucher system for Medicare, and freezes nonsecurity discretionary spending from 2010-2019. As the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities notes, the Ryan budget would not even balance the budget or seriously reduce the national debt. It would, however, cut benefits for generations of elderly Americans and place millions into poverty.

Yglesias

Profiles in Courage

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I continue to feel that the House GOP’s impressive level of partisan unity hasn’t been explored to the extent that it should. You often hear it explained with reference to the fact that most members have uncompetitive, very conservative districts. Which is true enough. But most is not all. Take Ken Calvert, Dan Lungren, and Brian Billbray in California, for example. These guys all represent districts that Barack Obama carried in 2008 and they themselves won 51 percent, 49 percent, and 51 percent of the vote respectively in fairly close 2008 House races.

These are not people who can count on the angry anti-Obama minority to win elections for them. And John Boehner has little in the way of favors to hand out, while Nancy Pelosi is in a position to give them something to take back to their district at home in exchange for acquiring a veneer of bipartisan cover. And yet not a one of them—nor even a single House Republicans nationwide—could be induced to vote for the Obama Recovery Act or the Obama budget plan. It’s impressive. My best guess is that the Club for Growth has really put the fear of God into everyone, but maybe there’s more to it.

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