Bush faces election-yr pressure to use oil reserve
By Tom Doggett -Analysis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush may be tempted to tap into the Strategic Petroleum Reserve this election year to help the Republican nominee he hopes will succeed him, but the impact on lowering gasoline prices and thus winning over voters would likely be small.
The Republican nominee in this year's U.S. presidential election is likely to pressure the White House to use the emergency oil stockpile, especially if he is far behind his Democratic counterpart in the polls.
"Bush may come under a lot of pressure to act before people's minds are made up that there's no way they're going to vote for a Republican," said Daniel J. Weiss, an energy expert at the Center for American Progress in Washington.
However, past releases of oil from the reserve lowered prices for only a short period.
Former President Bill Clinton was accused of using low winter fuel supplies as an excuse to release some 30 million barrels of oil from the reserve in late September 2000, just weeks before that year's presidential election, to help the Democratic nominee, Clinton's then-vice president, Al Gore.
The result: The price of oil dropped about $1 a barrel over the next week and gasoline fell about 4 cents a gallon before rising again.
The Strategic Petroleum Reserve, created by Congress in response to the 1973 Arab oil embargo, now holds about 698 million barrels of crude at four underground storage sites in Texas and Louisiana.
The United States consumes 21 million barrels of oil a day. Continued...







