Diana DeGette digital ad campaign controversy

Diana DeGette digital ad campaign controversy

Fourth-generation Coloradan Rep. Diana DeGette has devoted her life to serving the citizens of Colorado’s First Congressional District. DeGette, who is currently serving her twelfth term, is seen as a key figure in the continuing national debate about health care.

Diana DeGette digital ad campaign oil gas price controversy

A prominent conservative group is attacking U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette with a digital advertisement controversy that accuses the Denver Democrat of supporting Biden administration policies that, according to the group, have resulted in skyrocketing gas prices. However, a spokesman for DeGette told Colorado Politics that she believes oil companies are largely to blame for the pain that consumers are experiencing at the pump.

On July 7, the American Action Network, a right-leaning group connected to the House Republicans, declared that a multimillion-dollar wave of TV and internet advertisements aimed at DeGette will be part of the campaign to increase domestic energy output.

Diana DeGette

The “high five figures” a spokesman for the group claimed it is spending on the DeGette ad appear to be only a fraction of the sums the conservative group announced it is allocating for broadcast and digital advertising targeted at some incumbents running in more competitive districts. The ads are part of a $8.5 million summer campaign targeting House Democrats who serve on key committees. According to the spokesman, future spending on the advertisement, which is currently airing on Facebook, YouTube, and other digital platforms, may rise.

In the predominantly Democratic 1st Congressional District, whose boundaries mostly overlap with Denver’s city limits, DeGette, a member of the House Energy and Commerce and Natural Resources committees, is seeking re-election for a 14th term.

Diana DeGette digital ad campaign video

The president and DeGette “shut off American energy production, placed the brakes on pipelines and future drilling projects, costing jobs and pushing gas prices through the ceiling,” the narrator of the 15-second commercial claims. The advertisement requests that viewers “inform Congresswoman DeGette to help open American energy production and cut gas prices” as the phone number for DeGette’s congressional office flashes on the screen.

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The advertisement also includes the bill number for the Republican-sponsored American Energy Independence from Russia Act, which among other things would allow construction of a pipeline that Biden had cancelled in the first days of his administration, authorise leasing of oil and gas on federal lands, and lift export restrictions on natural gas.

Since its introduction in the Democratic-controlled House in late February, the bill, HR 6858, has been dormant. There are 140 cosponsors for the bill, including Colorado Republicans Lauren Boebert and Doug Lamborn.

DeGette ad controversy explained

The oil executives claimed that it’s not as straightforward as comparing daily global pricing to pump station prices. “Oil entering a refinery could have been bought for more money, so that price then travels all the way to the station. It’s not always an instant market, according to David Lawler, president of BP America. According to Michael Wirth, CEO of Chevron, “these factors do correspond over the long run, but they don’t always move up and down in the short term.” But a lot of Democrats questioned if businesses are being completely honest about the high prices that are still being charged.

Diana DeGette

Republicans rejected the Democrats’ line of inquiry. Rep. Morgan Griffith, the ranking member, utilised some of his time to inquire as to whether oil companies were exploiting the situation in Ukraine to keep prices inflated. All of the oil executives replied “no.” Ranking of the Energy and Commerce Committee The hearing was called “a diversion,” according to Cathy McMorris Rodgers it is completely political day today. She declared in her opening remarks that President Biden needed cover for his attack on American energy.

Several ideas, including a windfall tax for these producers, a break from the gas tax, and a lightening of the regulatory load, have been put forth on both sides of the political spectrum to assist lower the price of oil. Even if it meant making a smaller profit for them, DeGette encouraged the executives to return to their boards and see what they could do to lower prices at the pumps right once.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

Last week, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi stated that before moving forward with any legislation, her caucus wanted to wait and hear what the oil executives had to say.

About Diana DeGette

DeGette is in charge of overseeing several of the most significant federal agencies in our country, including the Food and Drug Administration, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) (FDA). Since 1997, Diana Louise DeGette has represented Colorado’s first congressional district in the United States Congress. Her district is located in Denver, and she is a Democrat. DeGette, the dean of Colorado’s congressional delegation, served as the Colorado State Representative for the 6th district from 1993 until her election to the U.S. House. She was a Chief Deputy Whip from 2005 to 2019.

US Rep. DeGette

In her capacity as chair of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, DeGette has taken a leading role in monitoring how our country’s health agencies are handling the COVID-19 pandemic, making sure the EPA is effectively upholding national environmental laws, and lowering the price of insulin for the millions of Americans who use it on a daily basis. DeGette is the chair of the Energy and Commerce Oversight Committee and a member of the House Natural Resources Committee, where she works to pass legislation that will strengthen the protection of Colorado’s public lands and fight global warming.

family

DeGette’s husband is lawyer Lino Lipinsky. They have two daughters together and reside in Denver. DeGette sings in the choir at her church.

Education

The fourth generation Coloradan, Patricia Anne DeGette, was born in Tachikawa, Japan. Richard Louis DeGette was her father. Her father was a member of the armed services at the time of her birth, and her parents were both Americans. She received a B.A. in political science from Colorado College, where she also was chosen to join the Pi Gamma Mu international honour society in 1979. In 1982, she graduated with a Juris Doctor from New York University School of Law. After that, she went back to Denver and started a law firm that specialised on civil rights and employment lawsuits.

Political Career

DeGette, a longtime political player in Denver, was chosen in 1992 to serve in the Colorado House of Representatives. She was chosen as the minority leader’s assistant in 1994 after being reelected. The so-called Bubble Bill, which she wrote, ensures that women in Colorado have unrestricted access to abortion clinics and other medical care facilities. In Hill v. Colorado, 530 U.S. 703, the US Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Bubble Bill (2000). The state’s Voluntary Cleanup and Redevelopment Act, written by DeGette, served as a template for other cleanup initiatives.

Political Career of DeGette

DeGette defeated the candidates for the Republican Party, Shane Bolling, the Libertarian Party, Kyle Furey, the Unity Party, Paul Noel Fiorino, and the Approval Voting Party in the 2020 election. 331,621 votes, or 73.6 percent of the total, went to DeGette.

Also Read:

Diana DeGette Net Worth, Family, and more

 

 

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