Living in the Lib Bubble Makes Them Lose
The Dems Suffering Through Another Wave of Biden-Induced Political Nausea. That's Such a...
We Knew the LA Mayor's Results Wouldn't Be Called, but These Drunk Pratt...
Bureaucrats in the Way
The Collapse Was Not an Accident
Difficult Freedom or Easy Tyranny: Which Will America Choose?
A Mouthful of Deception
Ali Velshi's 'Deep Unease' Over America at 250
Voters Must Know Every Democrat Sent to Washington Will Hurt Our Country
Driving People Out of California
Playing With Fire – Tehran's Deadly Gambit As Economic Collapse Looms
Europe Needs Patriotism
When Businesses Leave, They Likely Won’t Be Back
Biden's Privacy Panic: 50 Years on the Taxpayer Payroll, Now Suddenly Shy About...
SCOTUS Allows Alabama's New Congressional Map to Stay in Place
Tipsheet

WATCH: Dem Senator Lists the Reasons Biden's One Executive Order Was a Fatal Mistake

WATCH: Dem Senator Lists the Reasons Biden's One Executive Order Was a Fatal Mistake
AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File

Montana Senator Jon Tester (D) on Tuesday said President Joe Biden's decision to cancel the Keystone XL Pipeline was a mistake. He came to the conclusion based on his personal experience as a farmer.

Advertisement

"I've been a supporter of the Keystone Pipeline. There have been two caveats and they've been basic caveats: you do it to the safety standards and you respect private property rights. I think the Keystone Pipeline folks could have done a better getting the Fort Peck Tribe on board and they need to continue working to do that but in the end I think it's a good project," Tester explained. "I believe in climate change but I also think this one pipeline isn't going to turn it around, isn't going to turn our climate around. It's not going to make it a markedly worse situations."

The Montana senator said he supports the Keystone Pipeline but he also supports research diving into greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon dioxide, that are released into the air.

"These might sound like two different philosophies butting heads but I'll tell you, in my real life, I'm a farmer," he said. "And we're not where we need to be in this country for replacing diesel fuel with something else, in a tractor, for example, or a semi that's going down the road."

Advertisement

Tester explained that he supports the Keystone Pipeline project because significant research and development is needed for alternatives to conventional oil and gas. The market isn't there yet.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement