Biden's pander to the climate kooks could cost him in energy producing states

 The Hill:

The Biden administration’s pause on natural gas exports is putting the president in a tricky political spot in Pennsylvania, one of the key swing states in November.

Pennsylvania has been one of the biggest beneficiaries of the last decade’s natural gas boom in the U.S. The state’s production hit 7.5 trillion cubic feet in 2022, the second-highest in the nation behind Texas, according to data from the Energy Information Administration. The advisory firm FTI Consulting estimated the industry supports some 123,000 jobs in the state in research for natural gas firm the Marcellus Shale Coalition.

The administration earlier this year halted new export permits for liquefied natural gas (LNG) while it analyzes their impact on climate change, something that Republicans are sure to pounce on in a state where Biden is not only running neck and neck with former President Trump, but also where Democrats are looking to hold onto a critical Senate seat.

“This is one of those issues the Democratic Party gets split on, it depends on what state you’re in and what part of what state you’re in,” said Samuel Chen, a Republican political strategist based in Pennsylvania. “I think it’s an albatross in the sense of, if he leans more into the climate side of the party he’s going to lose people in these industries … [but] if he leans the other way, he runs the risk of isolating the environmental side.”
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Biden's chances of carrying Texas were already remote, but losing a big state like Pennsylvania could be devastating.  The Democrats' anti-energy left have become a problem for the party.

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