What the House actually did was vote to repeal tax breaks worth $18 billion that the oil companies received from the Republicans in 2004. The need for the tax breaks was highly questionable then, when these companies were profiting hugely from oil that had not yet reached $50 a barrel. Now that oil is above $100 a barrel, there's clearly no justification for those breaks. For example, Common Cause notes that just one company, ExxonMobil, spent more of its profits in 2007 buying back its own stock ($31.8 billion) than on its entire exploration and drilling operation ($20.9 billion). The top five oil companies are already sitting on $53 billion in cash that they can use if they want to discover and bring more oil to market. By restoring the tax code for oil companies to essentially when it was before oil lobbyists, armed with campaign cash, got their friends on the Republican-controlled Congress to change it , the federal government can put the subsidies where they are truly needed—into research and seed money for renewable technologies that promise domestic, green-collar jobs and a pollution-free environment. And no, Mr. President, ending a giveaway that never should have happened is not a "tax increase."
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