
Scott Pruitt at the Conservative Political Action Conference 2015. (Gage Skidmore/Creative Commons)
Scott Pruitt at the Conservative Political Action Conference 2015. (Gage Skidmore/Creative Commons)
By Shelby Fleig
WASHINGTON — A House Appropriations subcommittee grilled U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt Thursday afternoon on his deregulation agenda and spending habits.
Even though Pruitt is under fire amid a number of ethics scandals â including a $43,000 soundproof booth for his office, his below-market Capitol Hill condo rental from an energy lobbyistâs wife, and his reported retaliations against agency staff â Democratic lawmakers mostly voiced concerns about what they see as the administratorâs gutting of environmental protections policies.
Pruitt has announced a rollback to Obama-era fuel economy standards and a proposal to repeal the Clean Power Plan, which limits power plantsâ carbon emissions. Democratic lawmakers argued that would threaten public health.
âRolling back regulations that limit emissions will mean more cases of asthma in children,â said Rep. Betty McCollum, D-Minn., the subcommittee ranking member. âThatâs a fact. Your approach is bad for the environment, bad for public health and bad for business.â
Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, also said her constituents experience high rates of asthma due to air pollution.
âWeâre at the end of the tailpipe when it comes to the Clean Power Plan,â Pingree said. âWe have âred alertâ days. And I have no idea why would you want to rollback limits on fuel emissions.â
But Pruitt stood firm in the face of the criticism, telling lawmakers his vow to cut fuel economy standards came after a review of the previous administrationâs standards, which he said were based on assumptions of market conditions that havenât come true.
âWhat we donât want to see happen is we set the standards so high that manufacturers manufacture cars that people donât purchase,â Pruitt said. âWhat happens is, people will stay in older vehicles, which actually increases emissions.â
The Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies subcommittee is made up of seven Republicans and four Democrats and is chaired by Rep. Ken Calvert, a Republican from California. The two-hour hearing also focused on the EPA budget, which President Trump wants to cut by 30%.
âWe will not support President Trumpâs budget or your efforts to cripple the EPA with draconian cuts,â Rep. McCollum said.
Pruitt defended the Trump administration budget, saying the agency is âstripping burdensome costsâ and making âtransformational change.â
Republicans used their time to stand up for Pruitt and his actions as EPA administrator. Rep. Evan Jenkins, R-W.Va., says his stateâs coal economy has greatly improved since Pruitt took over last year.
âYour agency is restoring hope to the people of West Virginia,â Jenkins said. âWhat a difference, candidly, an election makes. I appreciate the good work of this administration getting us back in business.â
Pruittâs job security in Trumpâs fluid administration has been in question recently, amid his mounting ethics scandals. But Pruitt has relentlessly implemented Trumpâs campaign deregulation promises, and the president continues to defend Pruitt at least publicly. But Democrats at the hearing questioned whether heâs fit for the job.
Toward the end of the hearing, McCollum, the highest-ranking Democrat on the panel, looked straight at Pruitt and, speaking slowly, told the embattled administrator: âMr. Pruitt, I think itâs time for you to resign.â