When Senator Lisa Murkowski, the ranking member of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, started speaking today at yet another Congressional hearing on the Gulf oil spill, it was anything but business-as-usual. Her words got drowned out by a piece of political theater, courtesy of a Texas shrimper and long-time activist.
The packed hearing room watched as Diane Wilson stood up and started pouring oil from a jar on herself. She wanted to protest the Alaska Senator’s efforts to block legislation that would lift the cap on liability payments for oil spills in the Gulf, and Murkowski’s resolution, up for a vote tomorrow, aimed at stopping EPA from regulating greenhouse gases through the Clean Air Act.
“The police grabbed her right away and took her away,” Medea Benjamin of activist group CODEPINK, who was in the hearing room, told SolveClimate. She was supporting the action, holding up a sign that read “Murkowski = Big Oil.”
Guards told Benjamin she could stay in the hearing room if she put away her sign, as the spill was cleaned up and order restored. It turned out that the substance in the jar was not oil at all, but carob syrup.
“Diane didn’t want to be like BP and really spill oil,” Benjamin said, explaining that Wilson was out to provide lawmakers with a visceral experience of what it’s like to have oil dumped on you.
Reached by telephone, Robert Dillon, a spokesperson for the Senator, said they have her position on oil industry liability for the oil spill wrong.
“Senator Murkowski is in favor of raising the cap for oil spill liability,” he said. “What she’s against is the political gamesmanship to raise the cap to $10 billion without proper review. She will have a bill ready later this week, and it’s incorrect to characterize her as a friend of Big Oil.”
According to the Sunlight Foundation, Murkowski received more than $225,000 in campaign contributions from the oil and gas industries between 2005 and 2009, the fourth highest amount among the the 23 members of the Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
Wilson issued a statement through CODEPINK, which said in part:
“I am a fourth generation shrimper from the Gulf. With this BP disaster, I am seeing the destruction of my community and I am outraged.”
“I am also seeing elected representatives like Senator Lisa Murkowski blocking BP from being legally responsible to pay for this catastrophe. She stopped the Big Oil Bailout Prevention Act and wants to keep the liability cap at a pitiful $75 million. This is outrageous. How dare she side with big oil over the American people who have been so devastated by this manmade disaster.”
It is expected that Wilson will be cited and released and face charges. Last month she published an article in which she called herself “a self-appointed watchdog of the chemical, oil, and gas corporations that are decimating the Gulf.”
She is the author of An Unreasonable Woman: A True Story of Shrimpers, Politicos, Polluters, and the Fight for Seadrift, Texas which details her long fight against oil and chemical companies in her community.
She is also a co-founder of CODEPINK, a women-initiated grassroots peace and social justice movement.
See Also
Climate Activists Turn to Political Humor, for a Serious Purpose
Greenpeace Takes Mount Rushmore: Why 11 Climbers Were Willing to Risk Arrest
Climate Activism Soars Planetwide Ahead of Copenhagen Climate Talks
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