Opponents of the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan prepared on Monday for all-out war against the carbon-cutting regulation, blasting the measure publicly while accelerating behind-the-scenes efforts to stop its implementation.

On the day of the rule’s official adoption, key lawmakers and industry groups vowed to fight it in Congress and in the courts. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., stood before the Senate to declare his intention to “do everything I can to fight” the regulation, which is chiefly designed to reduce reliance on coal to generate power.

“I will not sit by while the White House takes aim at the lifeblood of our state’s economy,” McConnell said.

The attacks came as other groups prepared to launch initiatives on the state and local level. In anticipation of the rule’s unveiling, a task force of the American Legislative Exchange Council – a conservative group funded in part by electricity producers and fossil-fuel interests – approved model legislation to be sent to state legislatures around the country. The model bill would give state governments special authority to “expedite approval of resources to challenge the EPA’s Clean Power Plan,” according to a copy obtained by The Washington Post.

The Clean Power Plan, a key pillar of the administration’s climate agenda, seeks to dramatically reduce pollution from electricity generation for the next 15 years to lower levels of the greenhouses gases blamed for global warming.

President Obama sought to hit back against claims that the measure would kill jobs in the coal industry and raise costs to consumers of electricity.

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“Coal states have been losing jobs for decades,” Obama said. He said that mining industry workers would benefit from his health-care and job retraining programs. “I want to help them, not use them as a partisan football,” the president said.

Kentucky currently has 15,000 people working in mining and logging, or less than 1 percent of the state’s workforce of nearly 1.9 million, according to federal labor statistics.

But coal companies and coal-burning utilities – expected to be the biggest losers under the regulation – were not swayed. The Ohio Coal Association, a trade group representing the state’s coal companies, called the carbon-cutting plan “radical” and predicted “all pain and no gain.” It said consumers would face higher electricity rates and the threat of disruptions to the power supply.

The effort by ALEC to fire up state-level resistance to the EPA’s plan was approved July 24 at a meeting in San Diego of the group’s Energy, Environment and Agriculture Task Force. Members representing some of the nation’s biggest utilities, oil and gas companies and energy trade associations voted to support the model legislation that brings states into the fight against the regulation.

The proposed legislation seeks to direct state attorneys general to join lawsuits against the EPA to prevent “unlawful and costly obligations from being imposed on states.” It also calls for transferring money into a special fund set up by participating states to underwrite efforts to challenge unwanted environmental regulations. The money would come from state appropriations as well as “any gifts, grants and donations” from outside groups.

In a discussion before the vote, members of the group were advised to begin taking steps to comply with the regulation, even as they try to block it.

“Our folks think that submitting a (compliance) plan is a good way to go,” Todd Wynn, director of external affairs at the Edison Electric Institute, told the group, according to notes from the meeting. “For one thing, it doesn’t ruin your standing as far as litigation is concerned.”


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