Barack Obama,  Keystone XL Pipeline,  Polling

Poll Watch: Americans Favor Keystone XL Pipeline

According to the latest Gallup Poll.

A solid majority of Americans think the U.S. government should approve of building the Keystone XL pipeline, while 29% think it should not. Republicans are almost twice as likely as Democrats to want the government to approve the oil pipeline. About half of independents also approve.

These data were collected as part of Gallup’s annual Environment survey, conducted March 8-11, 2012. The Keystone XL oil pipeline is a politically divisive project, which President Obama and the Republicans in Congress have been battling over. The proposal from TransCanada Corporation for building a pipeline to carry crude oil from Canada down to the Gulf of Mexico, first made in 2005, needs approval from the U.S. president because it crosses an international border. The Republicans in Congress inserted a provision on the pipeline in the payroll tax extension bill late last year, but in January, President Obama rejected TransCanada’s permit entirely. However, the administration is allowing TransCanada to reapply for the permit it needs.

The pipeline would travel through the Midwest and the South, and Americans in those two regions are the most likely to approve of the project. Nearly 7 in 10 Midwesterners want the government to approve the building of the pipeline and 61% of those in the South do as well. There has been discussion in Washington and in the media about the potential new jobs the pipeline project would create, which may partly explain the higher support seen in those regions. Americans in the West and East are less likely to approve.

With rapidly rising gasoline prices, President Obama has become very sensitive to this particular pipeline. Unfortunately, while in Oklahoma today, this particular segment of the Keystone XL Pipeline has NOTHING to do with his previous refusals of approval. But, he has hedged his bets but allowing resubmittals.

So, why is the President having an apparent about face on this issue?

Why it is the election – duh!

President Obama this week set out on a two-day multistate trip to promote his energy strategy, including reducing America’s dependence on foreign oil. As part of his trip, Obama on Thursday will visit Cushing, Okla., the place where the southern portion of the Keystone XL pipeline would begin. There he will announce that his administration will expedite the permit process for the southern half of the pipeline, which does not need his specific approval.

TransCanada says this part of the pipeline will help it relieve a bottleneck of oil in Oklahoma. But Republicans in Congress have already criticized the president’s yet-to-be-made announcement, with a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner telling MSNBC it is an “attempt to take credit” for the pipeline, and that the southern part “is being built in spite of the president, not because of him.”

Regardless, the northern part of the pipeline, which does require the president’s approval, has still not been approved. The majority of Americans, though, say they want the government to allow the pipeline to be built. So, most would likely support any attempt by the president to move the pipeline forward.

If gasoline prices continue to rise, watch the radical environmentalists give Obama a “pass” on this pipeline and it will be approved.

Why?

See the polling results above, go over to Gallup and read more detailed polling results.

I am not too cynical, am I?