Houston Chronicle

HONEYMOON HEARING

- JAMES OSBORNE james.osborne@chron.com twitter.com/osborneja

How long will the EPA nominee’s romance with the GOP last?

WASHINGTON — A hunter and fisherman from the south, and a regulator who has upset environmen­talists by giving industry a place at the table in rule making, Michael Regan might have seemed an unusual choice to head the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in a Biden administra­tion stacked with progressiv­es.

But if Wednesday’s confirmati­on hearing was any indication, it was a calculated one. News coverage that evening extolled Regan’s bipartisan bonafides and talents as a “listener” and “consensus builder,” at a time Biden has made clear he intends to begin the contentiou­s process of shifting the country away from oil and other fossil fuels.

Regan, the top environmen­tal regulator in North Carolina, was not only introduced by his state’s two GOP senators but spent much of the first half-hour of his confirmati­on hearing exchanging grins with Republican­s as he promised his door would be open to everyone.

“I think we’re going to have a lot of good discussion­s,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., a fierce protector of his state’s oil and gas industry.

It seemed a long way from the testy relationsh­ip between the GOP and EPA administra­tors during the Obama administra­tion. Even four years after Gina McCarthy stepped down as head of the agency, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.V., was still complainin­g Wednesday how McCarthy never visited her state.

“It really stung,” she said. But before anyone takes Wednesday’s pleasantri­es as signs of a grand bipartisan deal on climate change in the works, new administra­tions and opposition parties have a habit of getting along at the outset.

Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., who in 2015 famously brought a snowball to the Senate floor as evidence global warming wasn’t happening, recounted Wednesday his fond memories of Obama’s first EPA administra­tor, Lisa Jackson, saying she keeps one of his Christmas cards on the wall of her office.

But those niceties have a habit of being pushed aside fairly quickly once political battles begin. Within four months of Jackson’s confirmati­on, Sen. John Barrasso, RWyo., was grilling her about a White House memo on the economic consequenc­es of the administra­tion’s decision to regulate carbon dioxide emissions.

“You are mentioned on every page,” he said. “It seems to that decision was based more on political calculatio­ns than scientific ones.”

And Regan’s confirmati­on hearing was not without tension, as Republican­s lambasted Biden executive orders canceling the constructi­on permit for the Keystone XL pipeline and putting a one-year moratorium on fossil fuel leasing on federal lands and waters.

Following one such speech, Regan tried to diffuse the tension, explaining, “We are facing a dire situation with climate change and (its) impacts. But I don’t think that’s to negate the fact that we all understand the anxiety and the fear as we make this transition that folks in your states have.”

That seemed to assuage some Republican­s, with Capito telling Regan, “I want to be your partner on this,” even as she lambasted former Obama officials like McCarthy, whom Biden appointed his climate tsar.

“Not you. You’re a fresh face, very transparen­t, very ready to work,” Capito said.

After Wednesday’s hearing, Regan is expected to sail through the rest of the confirmati­on process swiftly. But the real test will come in the months and years ahead, as he gets beyond the listening stage to deciding how to go about the massive undertakin­g of getting the United States on the path to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century.

In that task, it will take more than empathy for the plight of the fossil fuel workers if he is to win over Republican­s.

 ?? Caroline Brehman / Associated Press ?? Michael Regan, nominated by President Joe Biden to head the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, has a reputation as a consensus builder and appears to have strong bipartisan support.
Caroline Brehman / Associated Press Michael Regan, nominated by President Joe Biden to head the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, has a reputation as a consensus builder and appears to have strong bipartisan support.
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