The move is seen as an attempt to contrast his views on energy with that of Biden's replacement, Kamala Harris
The shake-up at the top of the ticket made political waves down ballot when President Joe Biden suspended his reelection campaign and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris last Sunday. U.S. Senate Candidate Dave McCormick toured a natural gas pad in Warren, Pennsylvania, Friday to contrast his "all of the above energy" goals with Harris’ resurfaced comments from her 2020 campaign that she would ban fracking.
Dave McCormick was quick to pivot to Kamala Harris this week as he vies for Senator Bob Casey’s Senate seat, considered one of the most likely pick-ups for Republicans to regain Senate control. McCormick released an ad Tuesday clipping Harris’ most liberal comments with Casey’s endorsement, calling Harris "the most liberal Presidential nominee in U.S. history." The McCormick campaign points to Casey endorsing Harris as proof he is "deeply out of step with the needs of Pennsylvanians." A 60-second version of the ad will air this Monday during the Olympics in the Scranton-Wilkes Barre and Pittsburgh markets.
Pennsylvania Senate candidate Dave McCormick spoke to voters at the event. (Fox News)
McCormick has spent months tying Senator Bob Casey to President Joe Biden, who according to a Fox News poll conducted June 7-10 had a 58% disapproval rating. The morning after the Pennsylvania primary in April, McCormick debuted his first general election ad "98 Percent" slamming Senator Bob Casey for voting with President Joe Biden 98% of the time. For months and most recently at the Republican National Convention, McCormick contrasted "Biden and Casey's failed policies" with the Trump-McCormick vision for Pennsylvania. As the presumptive Democratic nominee has changed in less than week so has the moniker fielding attacks from Republicans.
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Former President Donald Trump and McCormick, who have both committed to unleashing American energy as pillars of their campaigns, latched onto comments made by then-candidate Kamala Harris at a CNN town hall. "There’s no question I’m in favor of banning fracking," Harris said in 2019. Reacting to Harris’ resurfaced comments at a rally in North Carolina Wednesday Trump said, "She wants no fracking." President Harris and her campaign have since walked back those now viral comments alleging, she would not ban fracking.
"Trump's false claims about fracking bans are an obvious attempt to distract from his own plans to enrich oil and gas executives at the expense of the middle class," a spokesperson for the Harris campaign shared in a statement with Fox News. "The Biden-Harris Administration passed the largest ever climate change legislation and under their leadership, America now has the highest ever domestic energy production. This Administration created 300,000 energy jobs, while Trump lost nearly a million and his Project 2025 would undo the enormous progress we’ve made the past four years."
When asked by Fox News about Harris’ comments, McCormick pointed instead to the Biden-Harris administration’s record on energy, painting a conflicting view from the one presented by the Harris campaign.
"In this crazy effort to eliminate fossil fuel consumption in our country with all the EPA regulations, the ban on fracking, the LNG pause and killing the Keystone pipeline, the Biden administration has put hundreds of billions of dollars of subsidies to transition to EVs and to solar panels," McCormick said. "The majority of those solar panels and lithium batteries come from China, so in this crazy strategy of the radical environmental left, we've made ourselves more dependent on our greatest adversary. That’s the folly of the Biden administration's energy policy: bad for security, bad for our economy and bad for the environment. We need pro-energy policies that open up the opportunity here in Pennsylvania."
In a Fox News exclusive, Dave McCormick toured Bull Run Energy in Warren, Pennsylvania, Friday. Co-founded by Justin Hansen and Sam Harvey, the duo oversee 19 employees, 1,400 oil wells, and drill and frack 5 or 6 wells a year. Most of the oil they produce becomes products like lipstick and other lubricants and everyday products.
"Our company is very small," Harvey told Fox News Friday. "We have 21 total employees, including myself and Justin. All the shallow conventional operators in northwest Pennsylvania are small businesses, so this is not Big Oil. This is people trying to make a living. It’s a very marginal business. It's hard to make a living doing this."
Harvey outlined the difficulty of a one-size-fits-all approach to energy regulation, advocating to scale restrictions to the size and operation of an oil or gas business. Under the Biden-Harris administration, he said the top-down approach hasn’t matched the reality on the ground.
"Over the past three or four years, we've had a lot of regulations that have been rolling down from the federal government," Harvey said. "They roll down to the state government, and then they're just now starting to get implemented toward us. What we're seeing is that a lot of these regulations are designed for Big Oil companies that are drilling unconventional, deep horizontal wells. It doesn't seem like the folks who wrote the regulations in D.C. have ever come out and visited what these shallow, conventional operations are like. The language doesn't even fit what we're doing here."
US Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign event at Westover High School in Fayetteville, North Carolina, on July 18, 2024. (ALLISON JOYCE/AFP via Getty Images)
McCormick told Fox News he visited Bull Run energy to do just that – see how small gas and oil operations are run so he’s equipped to legislate on Pennsylvania’s energy economy.
"I want to make sure I understand all the issues associated with our energy economy." McCormick said. "So that when I'm a senator, I can be a pro-energy senator that does all the things necessary to make sure our energy sector develops."
Earlier this year, McCormick unveiled his "Keystone Agenda" which includes "unleashing Pennsylvania energy." The policy platform lays out a plan to remove Biden-era restrictions on gas and oil projects, embrace "all of the above" energy production, and use America’s natural resources to build energy independence and national security.
"We're blessed in Pennsylvania with the fourth largest natural gas reserves in the world," McCormick added. "We just can't get access to them, and we can't get them into the hands of consumers around the United States and around the world. That's the key. Pennsylvania’s senator should be fighting for those things. Bob Casey has been weak every step of the way and has been for more regulations and eventually the elimination of fossil fuels. That’s bad for Pennsylvanians and bad for America."
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In response, the Casey campaign doubled down on the senator’s commitment to "responsible fracking" and his voting record against fracking bans.
Biden speaks at the COP26 climate summit. (Fox News)
"David McCormick is grasping at straws because the people of Pennsylvania have figured out what he really is — a Connecticut hedge fund mega-millionaire who lied about where he lives, supports a dangerous abortion ban, built up the Chinese military, and invested millions in China’s largest fentanyl producer," a Casey campaign spokesperson shared with Fox News. "Meanwhile, Bob Casey supports fracking and is actually delivering for the Commonwealth by holding greedy corporations accountable, lowering costs, and supporting veterans and seniors."
"This race and this election is about two fundamentally different views of the world and how we should lead our country forward, how we can have an economy that's for working people, how we have secure borders, how we have a robust energy sector, so we can be an energy superpower," McCormick told Fox News Friday. "That's the choice between, Biden-Harris-Casey. Now, Harris-Casey versus McCormick-Trump at the top of the ticket. It's a fundamentally different view."