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Oil floats in the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Governor Rick Scott has said his priority was to ensure Florida’s natural resources are protected.
Oil floats in the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Governor Rick Scott has said his priority was to ensure Florida’s natural resources are protected. Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Oil floats in the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Governor Rick Scott has said his priority was to ensure Florida’s natural resources are protected. Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Trump administration won't allow oil drilling off Florida coast

This article is more than 6 years old

In an abrupt reversal after announcing plans to expand offshore oil drilling, administration bows to opposition from Republican Florida governor

The Trump administration said Tuesday that it would not allow oil drilling off the coast of Florida, abruptly reversing course under pressure from the state’s Republican governor, Rick Scott.

Interior secretary Ryan Zinke said after a brief meeting with Scott that drilling would be “off the table” when it comes to waters in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean off Florida.

Zinke announced plans last week to greatly expand offshore oil drilling from the Atlantic to the Arctic and Pacific oceans, including several possible operations off Florida, where drilling is now blocked. The plan was immediately met with bipartisan opposition on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts.

Scott, who is expected to run for Senate later this year, came out against the Trump administration plan when it was first announced, saying his top priority was to ensure that Florida’s natural resources are protected.

Other Republican governors also oppose the plan, including Larry Hogan of Maryland, Henry McMaster of South Carolina, and Charles Baker of Massachusetts.

Donald Trump, who frequently spends time in Florida, won the state’s 29 electoral votes in the 2016 election and has encouraged Scott to run for Senate.

Zinke said Tuesday that “Florida is obviously unique” and that the decision to remove the state came after meetings and discussion with Scott.

“For Floridians we are not drilling off the coast of Florida, which clearly the governor has expressed that’s important,” Zinke said.

Florida governor Rick Scott. Photograph: Chris Tilley/Reuters

When he announced the proposal last week, he knew it would spark discussion across the country, Zinke said.

“Our tactic was open everything up, then meet with the governors, meet with the stakeholders so that when we shaped it, it was right,” he told reporters at a news conference Tuesday night. “The president made it very clear that local voices count.”

When asked what caused the administration to change its position on Florida drilling, Zinke said bluntly: “The governor.”

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