Biden’s Keystone order didn't take ‘legalities’ into account: AG leading push to reverse decision
Montana AG: Reviewing all ‘constitutional avenues’ to reverse Biden Keystone decision
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen discusses working with a dozen other attorneys general to push back against President Biden’s executive order to stop the Keystone XL pipeline.
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen believes President Biden didn’t look into “the legalities” or “the effects on the ground” before choosing to halt the Keystone XL pipeline project.
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“I think this was completely to satiate his liberal friends on the coast,” he said on FOX Business' “Varney and Co.” Wednesday. “I don't think there was any consideration of the actual effects that canceling this project was going to have on a state like Montana.”
BIDEN'S KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE CANCELLATION SLAMMED BY GOP ATTORNEYS GENERAL: 'REAL-WORLD COSTS ARE DEVASTATING'
Knudsen, who is leading the effort to overturn Biden’s executive order with a dozen other state attorneys general, said the economic impact of this on his state is “huge,” pointing to a loss of jobs and tax revenue.
“Keystone XL was set to become the largest property taxpayer in [five of the poorest] counties,” he said. “And with the stroke of a pen, President Biden took that away.”
President Biden signed an executive order on his first day in office halting the construction of the pipeline that would transport up to 830,000 barrels of crude oil daily from Alberta, Canada, to Nebraska.
Proponents of the pipeline say it would provide tens of thousands of jobs to American workers and make the U.S. less reliant on foreign oil from Russia, Saudi Arabia and other nations.
MONTANA SENATOR SHAMES DEMOCRATS' FLIP-FLOP ON KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE, FRACKING