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    <title>Michael Huttner&#039;s Blog</title>
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            <title>AT ISSUE: Schaffer&#039;s questionable oil dealings</title>
            <description> As published in today&#039;s  Rocky Mountain News   
 
Coloradans are reeling from skyrocketing prices at the pump while the oil and gas industry is pulling in record profits. In his April 30 column (&quot;Smeared with oil&quot;), Vincent Carroll asks if Bob Schaffer&#039;s connection to an energy company is a liability. And the answer is: It should be. 
 
As a congressman, Schaffer voted for $33 billion in tax breaks for the oil and gas industry. When he left office in 2003, the industry, it seems, returned the favor. Schaffer promptly took a job as an oil industry executive and has since earned more than $1 million working to maximize his oil company&#039;s profits. 
 
We also question whether Schaffer is profiting from the war in Iraq. As a congressman, he voted to go to war. Then he went to work for the oil company and, in that position, he led the company&#039;s delegation in Iraq to lobby local speculators for oil contracts. 
 
At the time, the Iraqi government had secured a hard-fought compromise to ensure that all parties in the country could work together to manage the oil fields and share the profits. For President Bush, the national oil-sharing agreement was a key benchmark of progress in Iraq. 
 
But Schaffer&#039;s moves seem to undermine all that. By negotiating directly with American companies like Schaffer&#039;s, the local speculators were ignoring the Iraqi national government and working against American interests. 
 
Schaffer&#039;s trip to Iraq was bad for Iraq and bad for American interests but it paid off for him: This past November, as the war dragged into its fourth year, Schaffer&#039;s oil company was awarded a lucrative license for 269 square miles in northern Iraq. 
 
Congressman Schaffer consistently voted to help the oil and gas industry and, since leaving office, he&#039;s personally benefited from that industry. And his company has profited from working around the rules in a war he voted to authorize.  
 
 Michael Huttner heads Denver-based ProgressNowAction. </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelhuttner/CqsN</link>
            <comments>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelhuttner/CqsN/commentary#comments</comments>
            <pubDate>Tue, 13 May 2008 13:27:30 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Michael Huttner</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Michael Huttner</db:author_name>
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