http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/03/gibbs-premature-for-obama_n_561313.html
The Huffington Post May 4, 2010
Gibbs: 'Premature' For Obama To Change Position On Offshore Drilling

The Obama administration said on Monday that it remains 
"premature" to rule out including additional offshore drilling as 
part of comprehensive energy legislation, even as Senate Democrats 
warn that such a provision would make the bill "dead on arrival."

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said that the president will 
determine whether to stay with or abandon his call for additional 
drilling off various parts of the coast once he gets the findings 
of an investigation into the massive oil spill in the Gulf.

"The president was specific in ordering [Department of Interior] 
Secretary [Ken] Salazar to look at all the possible aspects of 
what could go wrong in this instance [and] to report back to him 
in that thirty day period," Gibbs said in response to a question 
from the Huffington Post. "This is an administration that is going 
to take any information we can get from that and have that dictate 
our decision making going forward. I think it would be premature 
to get too far ahead of where Secretary Salazar's investigation is."

While the White House declines to fully abandon offshore drilling 
in light of the current spill, others in the Senate are ramping up 
their opposition. On Friday, Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fl.) said any 
energy bill that included such exploration in its legislative 
language would be "dead on arrival" in the Senate. His office went 
even further, speculating that larger energy bill itself was now 
all but impassable in the Senate.

"It's dead on arrival if it contains oil drilling," an aide said, 
"if it doesn't have offshore drilling then you don't have 
Republicans."

Over the weekend, the lone Republican who had lent his support to 
a soon-to-be-introduced energy bill re-affirmed his stance that 
offshore drilling should be a component of the final product.

"We've had problems with car design, but you don't stop driving," 
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told the Greenville (S.C.) News. "The 
Challenger accident was heart-breaking but we went back to space. 
The biggest beneficiaries of this proposal to stop drilling would 
be overseas oil interests, OPEC and regimes that don't like us 
very much."
Story continues below

Caught between Graham and Nelson, the White House has decided to 
kick the can down the road. Asked if the president's thinking on 
the matter had evolved as the news of oil spilling in the Gulf has 
grown worse, Gibbs said that the administration's priority remains 
"to plug the leak in the floor of the ocean, deal with the spread 
of the oil on the surface, to ensure that we are doing all that is 
possible to prevent environmental and economic damages."

"The investigation [by Salazar] is to determine what happened and 
to use that information going forward to dictate any changes in 
our policy," he added.
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