Conservative message group Compass Colorado, one of a stable of press release-issuing GOP aligned front groups who pop up in inboxes from time to time, thinks they have figured out what’s really motivating Gov. Jared Polis to, their words, “stymie” Colorado oil and gas through the passage of Senate Bill 19-181–and Compass Colorado director Kelly Maher isn’t talking the usual capitalism-destroying cave-dwelling econightmare that the left has been fighting for all these years.
Why, Polis is doing it to (cue evil laughter) make money, of course!
According to his own financial disclosure statements, Polis is an investor in two Denver-based Bow River Capital funds that invest heavily in the Canadian oil and gas industry – a market with a much looser regulatory framework than that of Colorado or the United States. Polis personally has more than $250,000 invested in these funds. [Pols emphasis] If Polis scuttles oil and natural gas development in Colorado, the value of his personal investment holdings in Canada could increase as domestic supply contracts as a result.
Shortly after Polis started investing in Bow River energy funds, he joined forces with a fellow Democrat Congressman to sponsor legislation that would impose a burdensome regulatory framework on the oil and gas industry domestically. Polis’ pursuit of this legislation asking the oil and gas industry to follow the same rules as other industries is hypocritical given his investment in the more-lax Canadian oil and gas industry.
“Jared Polis’ radical environmental agenda could cost Colorado families hundreds of dollars a year in increased utility costs,” said Kelly Maher, executive director of Compass Colorado. “As part of this agenda, Polis also wants to end oil and gas development in Colorado, which will hurt our economy and cost our state hundreds of high-paying jobs. If he’s a “true believer” when it comes to the dog whistles he’s sending out to his radical environmental base, why does he continue to profit off of the investments in Canadian oil and gas?”
It all sounds terribly damning like there should be taiko drums thundering in the background, until you apply a bit of crucial context to this wild allegation. Gov. Polis’ 2015 congressional financial disclosure listed his net worth as somewhere between $142 million and $468 million, the range reflecting the value range of assets reported in the disclosure. Most informal estimates place Polis’ net worth on the high side of that range, and the booming markets of the last couple of years have most likely not been adverse to his bottom line either.
With this in mind, the idea that Polis is supporting this bill in order to “profit off investments in Canadian oil and gas” is without a doubt one of the silliest allegations leveled in a legislative debate that has been severely factually challenged from the beginning. The theory that Democrats want to plunge the world into some kind of primitivist dark age, as dumb as that is, at least has some anecdotal one-liners that can be thrown around in a debate. This is just prima facie stupid.
Gov. Polis’ GOP opponents (and yes, a Democrat or two) have tried for years to turn his wealth into a liability, but the arithmetic falls apart under even casual scrutiny. There’s just no rational way to make the charge stick. In addition, there’s something perhaps even more contemptible about wealth-adoring Republicans suddenly upset about Democrats who possess money.
But that’s for another blog post. For today, let’s just try to keep it somewhere in the vicinity of real.
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Speaking of wealth, perhaps Kelly Maher can tell us why the Trump administration has tried to downsize Bears Ears National Monument in Utah as a favor to Canadian mining firm, Energy Fuels Inc. (note: EFI's involvement in the downsizing has been publicly reported).
Wow! So much for "America First".
Did Kelly miss the part where Canadian tar sands have been piped into Denver every day for years to Suncor's Commerce City facility where they produce all grades of gasoline (over 1/3 of all gasoline consumed in CO), LPG, asphalt and the jet fuel for DIA (which is why DEN has a larger carbon footprint than Atlanta-Hartsfield)?
Who'd have thunk? Idaho?
Idaho Power aims to end use of coal and natural gas — a ‘big deal,’ conservationist says
This seems like it was just yesterday?
So, we can't trust Polis' motives because he's motivated by profit on some portion of his $250,000 investment, but we can trust the industry that says we don't need more regulation that is motivated by profit on its hundreds of millions of dollars of investment.
Oh the conundrum of it all.
Well, at least Polis sold out for much more than Kelly . . .
. . . Q. What’s the difference between an “escort” and a “street walker”?
(A. About $1,000 most places . . . I’m told.)
Here is the thing. To the average voter, $250,000 sounds like a large number. Large enough to be corrupting; because for them, it would be.
If you wrote 1/10% of Jared's net worth, then not a grabber headline.
Dude, it's 2019 America. That isn't even the dumbest thing I read within 30 minutes of waking up.