Coleman votes against drilling in Arctic refuge
FREDERIC J. FROMMER
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Despite last-minute reservations, Sen. Norm Coleman decided to
stick with a campaign promise and voted against allowing oil drilling in
Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Shortly before the vote, the Minnesota Republican said he was considering
changing his stance because supporters had offered to divert money to
support biodiesel. That would have helped Minnesota farmers, Coleman said.

Coleman was one of the last senators to vote on an amendment removing the
drilling provision from a budget resolution that's expected to pass later
this week. The amendment passed 52-48, with one more vote than needed to
block drilling.

Environmental groups pressured Coleman to keep his campaign promise, and
ahead of Wednesday's vote, a handful of demonstrators appeared outside
Coleman's St. Paul office. They carried a giant reproduction of a letter
Coleman sent a constituent last month stressing his commitment to protecting
the refuge.

"We know that Sen. Coleman is under intense pressure to go back on his
pledge to protect the Arctic refuge," Josh Buswell-Charkow, a field
organizer of the Alaska Coalition of Minnesota, said in a telephone
interview.

"But we in the environmental community believe that this is an absolutely
crucial issue," he said. "We will be watching his vote very closely. We
anticipate he will vote the way he promised he will."

Drilling supporters tried to use a budget resolution to lift the
congressional ban on drilling in ANWR. Senate Democrats and a few anti-ANWR
Republicans needed 51 votes to strip the drilling provision. Both sides had
expected a close vote.

Last week, Coleman was one of a handful of senators targeted by drilling
supporters in hopes of picking up a 50th vote. At the time, he said he still
opposed drilling but was willing to listen to drilling proponents.

Coleman said his main objection was that energy policy should be focused on
biodiesel, and that drilling supporters said they were willing to work with
him on that.

Earlier this year, Coleman declined to sign a letter circulated by
anti-drilling GOP senators, urging Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist,
R-Tenn., not to include ANWR in a budget vote.

President Bush has argued the refuge's oil - anywhere from 5.6 billion to 16
billion barrels - should be tapped to reduce America's dependance on foreign
crude. Environmentalists say that ANWR should be preserved as a sanctuary
for polar bears, musk oxen, caribou and migratory birds.

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Fred Frommer can be reached at ffrommer(at)ap.org

---

On the Net: U.S. Senate: http://www.senate.gov

Steve Spence
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