Sunday, September 14, 2008

Uranium's a hot topic for GOP

Sunday, Sep 14, 2008 - 12:08 AM

By JEFF E. SCHAPIRO
TIMES-DISPATCH COLUMNIST

It's too early for fall foliage, but lobster is always in season.


Del. Clarke Hogan, R-Halifax, threw a grand old party at his family's pile in Brunswick, Maine, this past weekend. Guests included a fellow Southsider, Del. Wat Abbitt, I-Appomattox, and Hogan's political sugar daddy, Speaker Bill Howell, R-Stafford.


All three are big players in a big piece of unfinished business: a state study of a proposed uranium mine in Pittsylvania County.


Perhaps that explains the presence at chez Hogan -- and reported in political circles -- of a top lobbyist for the prospective mine: John-Garrett Kemper.


Hogan, reached on his mobile phone, had little to say about the getaway with his Maine men. He snapped: "Where I go on vacation with my friends is, frankly, none of your business. . . . Write up your conspiracy theories, but don't waste my time."


For Hogan in particular, and House Republicans in general, the mine is a delicate matter.


Bowing to constituent fears that it would transform verdant farmland into a toxic moonscape, Hogan and Abbitt killed the Senate-passed study this year.


But that put the GOP in a weak position on a tough issue: energy.


House Republicans -- in effect, shouting "drill, baby, drill!" -- trash Democrats for opposing oil and gas exploration off the Virginia coast. But how can Republicans depict themselves as advocates of energy independence when -- on uranium, a source of nuclear fuel -- they appear deaf to cries of "dig, baby, dig!"?


Worse, they are surrendering an issue to Democrats.


Gov. Tim Kaine backed the study; so, too, did nearly every member of the Senate's slim Democratic majority.


Hogan and House Republicans need an exit strategy, one that allows them to be perceived as pro-business and pro-environment but protects them ahead of the 2009 election that could return them to the minority.


In other words, a scheme that spares them from even having to vote.


Why not circumvent the House and Senate next year and wire up a study by the Virginia Coal and Energy Commission?


Composed of gubernatorial and legislative appointees, the commission -- headed by Del. Terry Kilgore, R-Scott, an emblem of the GOP cash-and-carry approach to business-friendly bills -- apparently can pick topics free of General Assembly dicta.


That doesn't get Hogan off the hook with hometown peeps. Looking for cover -- Hogan might call it community input -- he wants local chambers of commerce to submit questions they want answered before, or if, the state's 26-year ban on uranium mining is lifted.


Enter, too, additional lobbying firepower.


Large-caliber Republicans Frank Atkinson and Mike Thomas recently signed with the firm that wants to extract that giant uranium deposit and is looking for a new P.R. shop to dig it out of a landslide of doubting press.


Want Bill Howell on your side? See Atkinson. He personally enlisted the speaker in the crackdown on payday lenders.


Thomas is a grass-roots guy. His job is to stroke the Halifax-Pittsylvania crowd. For Thomas, that's easier done than said. A native of Brunswick County, in Southside, Thomas speaks the language.


Perhaps he'll also be Hogan's translator.

http://www.inrich.com/cva/ric/news.apx.-content-articles-RTD-2008-09-14-0218.html

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