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Prices will fuel debate

No matter the GOP nominee, soaring gas costs will remain a major issue

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The president has warned critics against war talk on the international front. And he’s become quite defensive when asked about his critics taking advantage of him over the price of gas.

“Ed,” Obama said at a news conference the other day, exasperated with Fox News reporter Ed Henry, “just from a political perspective, do you think the president of the United States going into re-election wants gas prices to go higher? Is there anybody here who thinks that makes a lot of sense?”

Of course not.

Some of the Republican rhetoric on gas prices has been so ridiculous and over-the-top that it’s been relatively easy for Obama’s mouthpieces to dismiss it as nonsensical baby talk or worse.

For example, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s recent promise (or was that more of a desperate plea?) that he’d give us $2.50 gas falls into the ridiculous, nonsensical, baby-talk category.

“Snake oil,” mocked Obama’s strategist David Axelrod.

The earth will crack open and swallow me for saying this, but Axelrod is 100 percent correct. It is snake oil.

But then, before the 2008 presidential campaign, a young U.S. senator from Illinois routinely took political advantage of gas prices. Does anyone have any idea who that dashing young senator from Chicago might have been?

And his comments — whether snake oil or environmentally correct analysis or Chicago-style rough-and-tumble — will surely be played again and again in GOP campaign spots this fall.

With gas prices increasing, Obama recently bowed to his allies in the radical environmental movement and stopped construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline that would have easily shipped oil from Canada and created tens of thousands of American jobs.

Another avenue of GOP attack will be using U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu as the poster boy of the fall campaign.

The energy secretary doesn’t own a car. Not even a car subsidized by taxpayers, like a Chevy Volt. Big mistake. What will he drive in the Obama campaign commercial? A futuristic, science-fiction mode of transport like, say, a bicycle?

In a Sept. 2008 Wall Street Journal interview, before he was energy secretary, Chu famously said that the goal was to “boost the price of gasoline to the levels in Europe” so that Americans would wean themselves off fossil fuels and toward alternative energy.

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