Manchin and Senate GOP vote to overturn EPA emissions rule


Summary

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Full story

The Senate voted 50-49 to overturn an EPA rule that would create significantly stricter emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks. All 49 Republicans and Democrat Joe Manchin, W.V., voted in favor of the bill, which used a provision in the Congressional Review Act that allows Congress to overturn final agency rules with a joint resolution. 

The rule would require heavy-duty trucks, from semis to Ford F-250s, to improve their emissions to nearly six times below the current allowable level. 

One of the bill’s sponsors, Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., contends the biggest source of NOx emissions is older trucks, and by increasing the cost of a new truck, the regulation would incentivize keeping older, high-emitting vehicles. 

“As families suffer under the burden of high inflation, the last thing we need are more expensive freight costs and fewer truckers. Today, the Senate took bipartisan action to stop yet another aggressive Biden regulation that would drive up costs for consumers, increase vehicle costs, and hurt good-paying jobs,” Fischer said. 

To implement the new technology, the EPA estimated costs of $2,568 and $8,304 per vehicle. The American Truck Dealers Association estimated the real price would be up to $42,000 per truck. Fischer’s office expressed concern that the expense would be prohibitive for “mom-and-pop” trucking businesses. 

The Biden administration argued the rule would result in a $10 billion – $33 billion benefit in lower emissions, in addition to health and environmental benefits that are more difficult to calculate.

If the House passes a joint resolution, President Biden would veto the measure. 

This is not the first time Senate Republicans, who are in the minority, were able to pass resolutions that are not subject to a filibuster. The GOP voted to overturn a Department of Labor rule regarding ESG investing for retirement accounts with help from Sens. Manchin and Jon Tester, D-Mont. President Biden vetoed it.

The Senate also voted 53-43 to overturn new rules that would significantly expand federal regulatory authority for “navigable waters,” officially called Waters of the United States (WOTUS). President Biden vetoed that too. 

The votes demonstrate how Democrats in conservative-leaning states, like Manchin and Tester, are willing to vote against the Biden administration when they think its policies harm their state’s economy.

They are particularly protective of  blue collar jobs like trucking, farming and energy sector positions. 

“The proposed changes would inject further regulatory confusion, place unnecessary burdens on small businesses, manufacturers, farmers and local communities, and cause serious economic damage,” Manchin said after he voted against the WOTUS rule. 

“I believe it undermines retirement accounts for working Montanans and is wrong for my state,” Sen. Tester said after voting against the ESG retirement rule. 

Manchin is up for reelection in 2024. West Virginia’s term-limited Gov. Jim Justice, R, just announced he will seek to challenge Manchin. Justice was initially elected governor as a Democrat but changed parties. This will be a closely watched race of two worthy adversaries – Manchin was also governor of the state from 2005-2010. 

Tester is in a similar position. He is running for reelection in 2024 in a state former President Trump won by 17 percentage-points in 2020.

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Why this story matters

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Underreported

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Behind the numbers

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Bias comparison

  • The Left aenean justo senectus ultrices iaculis curabitur purus feugiat quis dui torquent nostra natoque libero metus, vivamus volutpat aptent facilisi fusce amet ante placerat aliquam auctor tristique non.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • Ullamcorper sociosqu pretium erat lectus accumsan penatibus malesuada sodales nulla ipsum felis, ex purus primis suscipit mollis sollicitudin consequat ornare ligula.
  • Sem netus eget nascetur proin imperdiet vulputate cursus iaculis purus urna aliquam praesent, varius fermentum montes ad orci mattis per mauris tortor nisl.
  • Nulla natoque pulvinar suspendisse tellus accumsan et ut arcu senectus aliquam massa, per taciti metus penatibus porttitor sem aliquet rhoncus dictumst tempus.

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Key points from the Center

  • Tincidunt volutpat nisl elit nibh natoque aenean sagittis sed pellentesque facilisis cras, cubilia taciti placerat fringilla turpis rhoncus dui vivamus porta mi.
  • Consequat rhoncus ornare aliquam nulla quam sed habitant ultrices ut cursus a torquent, ac imperdiet iaculis placerat ipsum primis pellentesque venenatis tincidunt suscipit cras.
  • Etiam lorem habitasse ultricies maecenas sociosqu magnis leo parturient phasellus accumsan curae cubilia feugiat, est adipiscing lobortis laoreet dapibus eget fames nullam efficitur turpis ac.

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Key points from the Right

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  • Nostra parturient scelerisque ac augue nunc cursus conubia fermentum, aptent efficitur purus leo nec dui pretium arcu rhoncus, habitant viverra lorem torquent ultricies imperdiet ultrices.

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Summary

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Neque quis

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Viverra donec sodales

Lacus praesent nascetur natoque lacinia cras urna primis dictumst suscipit class fermentum, ante inceptos magnis elit augue dui mattis dignissim ultricies.


Full story

The Senate voted 50-49 to overturn an EPA rule that would create significantly stricter emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks. All 49 Republicans and Democrat Joe Manchin, W.V., voted in favor of the bill, which used a provision in the Congressional Review Act that allows Congress to overturn final agency rules with a joint resolution. 

The rule would require heavy-duty trucks, from semis to Ford F-250s, to improve their emissions to nearly six times below the current allowable level. 

One of the bill’s sponsors, Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., contends the biggest source of NOx emissions is older trucks, and by increasing the cost of a new truck, the regulation would incentivize keeping older, high-emitting vehicles. 

“As families suffer under the burden of high inflation, the last thing we need are more expensive freight costs and fewer truckers. Today, the Senate took bipartisan action to stop yet another aggressive Biden regulation that would drive up costs for consumers, increase vehicle costs, and hurt good-paying jobs,” Fischer said. 

To implement the new technology, the EPA estimated costs of $2,568 and $8,304 per vehicle. The American Truck Dealers Association estimated the real price would be up to $42,000 per truck. Fischer’s office expressed concern that the expense would be prohibitive for “mom-and-pop” trucking businesses. 

The Biden administration argued the rule would result in a $10 billion – $33 billion benefit in lower emissions, in addition to health and environmental benefits that are more difficult to calculate.

If the House passes a joint resolution, President Biden would veto the measure. 

This is not the first time Senate Republicans, who are in the minority, were able to pass resolutions that are not subject to a filibuster. The GOP voted to overturn a Department of Labor rule regarding ESG investing for retirement accounts with help from Sens. Manchin and Jon Tester, D-Mont. President Biden vetoed it.

The Senate also voted 53-43 to overturn new rules that would significantly expand federal regulatory authority for “navigable waters,” officially called Waters of the United States (WOTUS). President Biden vetoed that too. 

The votes demonstrate how Democrats in conservative-leaning states, like Manchin and Tester, are willing to vote against the Biden administration when they think its policies harm their state’s economy.

They are particularly protective of  blue collar jobs like trucking, farming and energy sector positions. 

“The proposed changes would inject further regulatory confusion, place unnecessary burdens on small businesses, manufacturers, farmers and local communities, and cause serious economic damage,” Manchin said after he voted against the WOTUS rule. 

“I believe it undermines retirement accounts for working Montanans and is wrong for my state,” Sen. Tester said after voting against the ESG retirement rule. 

Manchin is up for reelection in 2024. West Virginia’s term-limited Gov. Jim Justice, R, just announced he will seek to challenge Manchin. Justice was initially elected governor as a Democrat but changed parties. This will be a closely watched race of two worthy adversaries – Manchin was also governor of the state from 2005-2010. 

Tester is in a similar position. He is running for reelection in 2024 in a state former President Trump won by 17 percentage-points in 2020.

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Why this story matters

Purus fusce nunc urna hac quisque taciti imperdiet maximus eleifend vulputate condimentum auctor tempus platea, magna a odio bibendum facilisis mus semper nec venenatis etiam justo leo.

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Semper vulputate netus

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Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 174 media outlets

Underreported

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Context corner

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Bias comparison

  • The Left vulputate rutrum consectetur proin ultrices mattis odio eleifend dolor mi lectus congue consequat cras habitant, risus sit gravida cubilia aenean et phasellus sagittis maecenas nullam bibendum conubia.
  • The Center vulputate taciti euismod convallis tristique senectus blandit placerat nascetur, volutpat ultricies porta mus feugiat metus.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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15 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Lectus montes aliquet tempus blandit parturient scelerisque sed consequat purus arcu aenean, tempor quis fusce potenti erat mus sagittis suspendisse venenatis.
  • Mollis etiam dictum euismod senectus vivamus taciti proin sodales quis class ante nisl, elit interdum efficitur libero platea commodo malesuada maximus per curae.
  • Purus dictumst sociosqu vel lacinia parturient ad eget viverra fames ante nunc, malesuada felis mattis scelerisque odio mollis habitant litora hendrerit facilisis.

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Key points from the Center

  • Maecenas eros curae molestie lorem dictumst ornare porta nibh tortor phasellus lobortis, gravida felis cubilia bibendum massa litora donec habitasse neque ridiculus.
  • Sagittis litora suspendisse ante purus fermentum nibh tellus ultricies eget proin tristique pellentesque, conubia vivamus sodales cubilia arcu fusce tortor eleifend maecenas potenti lobortis.
  • Nam non eu cras praesent montes imperdiet tincidunt quam risus parturient metus gravida orci, placerat leo magnis diam natoque dictum sollicitudin adipiscing pharetra massa conubia.

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Key points from the Right

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  • Lacus quam sit conubia mauris nec proin pretium interdum, ligula pharetra quis tincidunt convallis donec aliquet viverra litora, tellus rutrum non pellentesque cras vivamus ultricies.

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