The effort of Senators John Kerry (D-Mass.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) to craft comprehensive clean energy legislation that caps global warming pollution has brought some positive words from Big Oil and their political allies. In particular, the senators are considering a proposal by ConocoPhillips, BP America, and Exxon Mobil to exclude petroleum producers and refiners from a carbon market and instead levy a carbon fee. "Once you have oil people saying, `We can live with this, this was our idea,' then hopefully everybody else begins to look at this thing anew," Graham told reporters. "That's the hope." However, the American Petroleum Institute's Jack Gerard explained that the "support" from the oil industry for a carbon fee on petroleum will come in the form of "signs at the gas pump letting people know they're paying more because of U.S. efforts to deal with climate change":
In other words, the oil industry likes the idea of legislators embracing a carbon fee plan -- a plan originally proposed by oil companies -- because they'll be able to blame "U.S. efforts to deal with climate change" on high gas prices. And that is what they're already doing, with full-page ads in Politico and Roll Call that attack Congress for "new energy taxes":