Goode, Perriello spar over economy
(The Daily Progress/Matthew Rosenberg)
Maureen and Bob Fanelli sit in the front row and discuss the debate between Virgil Goode and Tom Perriello on Wednesday, September 3rd 2008, at the Institute of Advanced Learning and Research in Danville, Va.
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By Brian McNeill
Published: September 3, 2008
DANVILLE – U.S. Rep. Virgil H. Goode Jr. and challenger Tom Perriello clashed Wednesday evening in the second debate of the campaign, quarrelling about economic development, congressional earmarks and oil drilling.
Goode, a Republican from Rocky Mount and a 12-year incumbent, told a crowd of several hundred that he has a long record of steering federal dollars to the 5th District to invest in infrastructure, create jobs and promote emerging alternative energy projects. His earmarks, he said, have benefited the University of Virginia Medical Center, the National Ground Intelligence Center and numerous other entities.
“If I’m re-elected, I’m going to make sure that Southside gets a fair slice of the pie,” Goode promised.
Democrat Perriello, a national security consultant and faith-based initiative founder from Ivy, said that he would do more to benefit Southside and Central Virginia than Goode, as he would be a member of the majority party in Congress. He pointed out that Roll Call, a nonpartisan newspaper, ranked Goode as only the 60th most effective congressman of the 66 members on the House Appropriations Committee.
“We need someone who gets an A+ in terms of effectiveness, not just getting a passing grade,” Perriello said.
The two rivals spoke at Danville’s Institute for Advanced Learning and Research in a debate co-sponsored by the Sorensen Institute for Political Leadership at the University of Virginia and the Danville Register & Bee.
In his opening remarks, Goode said that he was “100 percent pro-life” while Perriello is “pro-abortion.” He also criticized Perriello for supporting Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, whom he said was not trustworthy when it comes to protecting America.
“It scares me that Barack Obama could be in charge of our national security policy,” said Goode, who was one of a small handful of GOP congressmen who had not endorsed Republican nominee John McCain prior to the Republican National Convention. He now supports McCain, he said.
Perriello responded that he is a proud backer of Obama. Obama, he said, is part of a new generation of politicians who are interested in achieving results by working across party lines, rather than scoring cynical political points.
“What I see now is a new kind of politics that is not about left and right, but about right and wrong,” Perriello said.
If elected, Perriello said, his No. 1 goal would be to boost job opportunities in the district, which stretches from Charlottesville down to Southside communities such as Danville and Martinsville.
“Jobs will be my first priority,” he said. “I will work a double shift every day to make sure I’m doing everything I can be doing.”
When asked about their views on the nation’s energy challenges, the candidates outlined markedly different views.
Goode supports domestic drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and in the nation’s outer continental shelf. He said he backs the “American Energy Act” which would permit more domestic energy exploration, offer tax incentives for energy-efficient vehicles and businesses, and extend tax credits for alternative energy production.
“We need American all the way,” Goode said. “We don’t need to be getting our oil from countries like Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Venezuela.”
Goode added that if his fellow congressmen had listened to him about domestic drilling seven or eight years ago, the nation might not have found itself in its energy predicament.
Perriello said it is “ridiculous” for Goode to suggest that his leadership might have averted the current high oil prices.
For his part, Perriello said the federal government needs to take a kitchen-sink approach to energy policy, supporting off-shore drilling, nuclear power, biofuel research and conservation. The recent drop in gas prices, he said, was brought about because the dollar has started to gain strength and because demand for oil dropped as Americans started driving less.
Perriello said it was misleading of Goode to portray domestic drilling as a cure-all to high gas prices and the nation’s dependence on foreign oil.
“I’m not going to stand here and tell people that [drilling] is going to solve the problem because it’s not,” he said.
Goode pointed out that Perriello is opposed to drilling in Alaska.
“If you have a no-drill policy in [the Artic National Wildlife Refuge] like Perriello and Barack Obama want, we’re going to be even further behind.”
Goode is in the top 3 percent of congressmen for his personal stock holdings in oil companies, Perriello said. Goode, he said, has voted against higher fuel efficiency standards for automobiles.
“Right now, the car companies can make more money buying politicians than by building me a better truck,” he said.
Goode shot back that Perriello has oil stocks too, adding that he, Goode, is not wealthy like Democrats such as former Gov. Mark R. Warner, who is running for U.S. Senate. Goode held up Warner’s financial disclosure form, which he said showed Warner’s personal bank account has between $500,000 and $1 million.
“He’s got more money in his checking account than I’ve had for anything,” he said.
Regarding national security, Goode said that he supports building a fence along the border with Mexico. It would, he said, keep out illegal immigrants and terrorists. He added that he supports the U.S. military’s surge tactic in Iraq.
Perriello said he was astounded that Goode, who voted to authorize the Iraq war, would list building a fence as his national security priority. Perriello said he believes that the nation’s energy crisis is its No. 1 national security, economic and environmental challenge. He said he wants to position the 5th District at the forefront of the emerging “green economy” to turn the challenge into an opportunity for job growth and economic development.
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Posted by ( cville ) on September 07, 2008 at 6:01 pm
Goode is absolutely embarassing, embarassing.
Perriello is a breath of fresh air, with ideas and solutions.
Perriello is definitely the right choice for the 5th district!
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Posted by ( Ross ) on September 04, 2008 at 1:09 pm
If you are going to sit in your recliner and watch the Pickens commercials on TV, then at least check his numbers. His reference to 3% of the world’s oil reserves is a reference to proven reserves.
According to USGS, the Bakken Oil Formation contains 200 billion barrels of oil. The Bakken field numbers are not included in Pickens’ 3% number. Neither is ANWR (11.6 to 31.5 billion barrels or 30 to 50 years of consumable oil) or fields off of the north shore of Alaska or reserves found in the Alaskan prairies. What about the projected billions of barrels of oil along the outer continental shelf…off of California…off of Florida. According to the USGS, if these reserves were tapped, the U. S. would rank at the top of oil producing nations.
…on to oil shale in the Green River Valley. The left will tell you that we would be jeopardizing a very sensitive environmental area. This valley is located in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming and looks like moonscape. This (Green) valley is rock and sand and not very pretty rock at that. However, the area does contain two trillion barrels of oil. This product can be extracted without exploration and at a cost of $52.00 per barrel…at current consumption this deposit would serve the U. S. 250 years. These are USGS numbers, not mine.
The U. S. has the largest coal reserve in the world. Current estimates show that coal to oil conversion is cost competitive if oil remains above $48.00 per barrel. The conversion process also significantly reduces carbon levels in the final product.
What would the left replace fossil fuels with?
Hydrogen is years away from being a deliverable technology. There is currently no refining or distribution structure in place in the U. S.
One of the dirty little secrets not discussed by the left or by the auto industry is that hydrogen speeds up metal fatigue…engines and fuel lines fatigue and fail at a significant rate.
Battery technology is not currently practical (80 miles per charge is not acceptable). If you converted 30% of Virginia autos from gasoline to electric, the electric grid would crash due to lack of capacity. Besides, which is better, blowing it out of a tail pipe of a car or up the stack of a coal fired power plant.
The left needs to find deliverable cost effective technologies as replacements for fossil fuels before it attempts to pull the plug on the fuel that we currently depend on.
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Posted by ( Walker ) on September 04, 2008 at 9:44 am
Virgil Goode, our district’s unfortunate national embarrassment, is outclassed and out of his league this time around and he knows it. Why would he bring up Mark Warner’s personal wealth to defend his own unholy ties to big oil? It’s because he has no excuses. With is shameful voting record of giving big oil everything they ever wished for, it’s a good thing Exxon hasn’t discovered oil in the Blue Ridge. Mr. Perriello is the brightest candidate to hit this district in decades. It’s too bad every district doesn’t have someone like him to clean out the entire bunch in Washington.
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Posted by ( BigAl ) on September 03, 2008 at 10:48 pm
Okay, now Virgil has not and will never be accused of being a mental giant, but this is about the most absurd, uneducated thing he’s said all day: “We need American all the way,” Goode said. “We don’t need to be getting our oil from countries like Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Venezuela.”
On its best day, the United States produces 3% of the world’s oil supply. If we start drilling offshore and started pumping TODAY, the United States would produce 3% of the world’s oil supply. Yet we consume 25% of the world’s oil. How does Virgil think we can satisfy that thirst will all domestic oil?
It’s interesting that Virgil, a Republican, is skipping his party’s convention. He’s not alone - lots of GOP Congresspersons and Senators are sitting this one out. What a great team! And they actually expect us to keep them in the White House?
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