WaPo Laments How 'Solyndra Fallout' Places Obama's Energy Secretary 'at Center of Policy Storm'
Poor Steven Chu. The Nobel Prize-winning scientist and Obama's Energy Secretary stands "at [the] center of [the] Solyndra policy storm," where he's learning "lessons in political science" according to Washington Post staffer Steven Mufson's 45-paragraph front-page article in the October 28 paper.
Although the Post has done a decent job thus far in following the Solyndra scandal and reporting on the unfolding revelations of damning emails from administration officials who questioned the wisdom and legality of the Solyndra loan, Mufson's piece was focused on defending Chu as a well-meaning career scientist and political neophyte who's been caught up in an unfortunate political firestorm (emphases mine):
Ever since Solyndra, a California manufacturer of solar panels, went bankrupt Sept. 5 with $535 million of federal loan guarantees, Chu and his Energy Department have been the focus of some unwanted attention. The department has been hammered by members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has unearthed reams of Obama administration e-mails about internal rifts over the Solyndra loan guarantee. Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-Fla.), head of the panel’s oversight subcommittee, has gotten Chu to agree to testify Nov. 17. And GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich called for Chu to be fired for “grossly mismanaging federal dollars.”
“Daily Show” host Jon Stewart devoted eight minutes to the Solyndra affair and addressed lawmakers’ charges that the loan was based on politics, not merit.
“Maybe their hearts were in the right place and they bet on the wrong horse,” said Stewart of the Energy Department officials. “It’s not like there’s any damning evidence they knew in advance this horse was, in fact, a donkey.”
For Chu, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist, it has been a demonstration that the laws of politics are more important in Washington than the laws of physics.
[...]
On Oct. 1, the dreary weather seemed to be a metaphor when Chu spoke to the college teams that had competed in the Solar Decathlon, a biannual event sponsored by the Energy Department. For six of the previous nine days, Washington’s skies had been overcast and rainy while the teams showed off innovative solar-powered homes temporarily erected between the Tidal Basin and the Potomac River.
“Sun, sun, sun, here it comes,” a recording blared hopefully as the closing ceremony began.
It should have been a sunny moment for Chu, but the Solyndra flap over the previous month had cast its own shadow. So Chu made a spirited defense of the much-maligned loan guarantee program.
“Just as there is a fierce competition happening here, there is also a fierce competition happening around the world,” Chu said. “The United States faces a choice today: Will we sit on the sidelines and fall behind, or will we play to win the clean-energy race?”
“I say we can’t afford not to,” Chu added. “It’s not enough for our country to invent clean-energy technologies. We have to make them, and we have to use them. Made in America, invented in America and sold round the world. That’s how we’ll compete in the 21st century.”
Will that be Chu’s legacy?
Many say he will leave things such as science hubs, new labs and new agendas for old national labs. Then there is the advanced vehicle technology portfolio of federal loan guarantees and the renewable-energy loan guarantee program, which in addition to Solyndra included $16 billion in guarantees to 27 other projects, such as big solar power generation plants, a giant wind farm and two of the first commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol plants.
While these initiatives have won Chu devoted fans, others question Chu’s management of the department and his lack of political skills.
“To be energy secretary, it is not necessary to be able to explain how a nuclear plant works,” said Scott Segal, an energy lobbyist at the law firm of Bracewell & Giuliani. “We need someone to talk about what policy should be, which may be more complicated.”
- Ken Shepherd's blog
- Login to post comments






“Daily Show” host Jon Stewart devoted eight minutes to the Solyndra affair and addressed lawmakers’ charges that the loan was based on politics, not merit.









Comments
Seems to remind me of Clinton and the Enron scandal . .
Submitted by Gary Hall on Fri, 10/28/2011 - 3:56pm.
whitewash by the national MSM . . or not. Hmm.
I forgot, the national media never had to cover up for Clinton's role in creating the nation's most hated green energy company, Enron -- why? Because they never connected him to the scandals. The nation never associated Bill Clinton with Enron. They blamed it all on the guy who inherited the mess from Clinton, President Bush - who did nothing to help Enron as they collapsed, as did thousands of other dot.com era companies following the collapse of that bubble in March, 2000.
(;~> gary
PS - Sec. Chu Chu would be the same one that".. selected Steve Koonin, BP's chief scientist, to be his undersecretary." Ref: Mother Jones
. . as this Chu Chu . .
What a team, they are:
Oh really? Perhaps Chu Chu should have asked Koo Koo.
Steven Chu has become just
Submitted by HeavyChevy on Fri, 10/28/2011 - 4:24pm.
Steven Chu has become just another sacrificial lamb for Obama.
Proof once again, bureaucrats suk masquerading as entrepreneurs
Submitted by upcountrywater on Fri, 10/28/2011 - 4:32pm.
I'm a politician, lookie at how much I can screw up, and get a second chance to waste taxpayers money...
Get out of of the private sector NOW!!!
Ohh look solar panels will not be necessary for Hummm 300 years.
Geologists have known since the 1970s that the Bakken formation was brimming with oil. But its reservoir rock has low porosity, meaning that getting the oil out was technically tricky and unjustified by oil prices kept low by plentiful Middle Eastern reserves. “For decades we resisted going after it because of the threat that OPEC could have opened the spigots and drowned us,” says Hamm. “But I donʼt think they [OPEC] has sufficient excess capacity to do that today.”
You Didn't Build That.
Watch Obama throw Chu under the bus.
Submitted by hbnolikeee on Fri, 10/28/2011 - 4:32pm.
The fact that Obama's campaign benefited from all these failed greenie contracts will be masked by the bus impact.
What's the matter, Steven...
Submitted by CobraMan on Fri, 10/28/2011 - 7:30pm.
What's the matter, Steven, don't like getting your butt chu...ahh, well, let's just leave it at that.
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court
Or Anwar al-Awlaki.
In one way Chu is a perfect reflection of Obama.
Submitted by needle on Fri, 10/28/2011 - 9:30pm.
They are both WAY over their head, and lacking the chops to run a coffee shop.
Chu may not have been have been a criminal fraud like his boss, but he is catching up.
- Looking forward to the self-annihilation of the Manipulated Stories Machine.
Same pattern different story,
Submitted by Reaver on Fri, 10/28/2011 - 10:00pm.
Same pattern different story, just like the occupy mob who was minding their own business peacefully practicing their free speech rights until fascist riot police descended on them. Here’s Steven Chu walking along minding his own business when the Solyndra scandal jumps out of the bushes and mugs him. Poor Steve.
Solyndra and Fast and Furious
Submitted by Dr. Ron on Sat, 10/29/2011 - 2:03am.
NO DOUBT THE WH SHREDDER, THE DOJ SHREDDER AND MANY OTHERS ARE IN 24/7 MODE...THANK GOD FOR EMAILS, BUT THE DELETE BUTTONS ARE ALSO WORKING 24/7 THERE. NAPOLITANO, HOLDER , CLINTON AND REST: THE HEAR/SEE/KNOW NOTHING CROWD.