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GOP highlights failed Keystone vote ahead of La. runoff

Louisiana congressman, running for Senate, says his opponent, Democratic incumbent Mary Landrieu, has failed to advance an oil pipeline that would benefit the state
Rep. Bill Cassidy criticizes Sen. Mary Landrieu over Keystone pipeline 05:33

BATON ROUGE, La. -- Louisiana Republican Senate candidate Bill Cassidy said Senate Democrats' rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline is stifling American energy independence in the weekly GOP address on Saturday.

Cassidy, currently a member of the House of Representatives, used the nationally released speech to take fresh digs at Democratic incumbent Sen. Mary Landrieu's failure to get the vote needed for pipeline passage - though he never names Landrieu. Cassidy's name was on the House-passed bill.

Rep. Bill Cassidy: Obama delaying Keystone pipeline to please his base 04:30
Mary Landrieu pushes lame-duck Senate to approve Keystone pipeline 05:29

"More than six years after the Keystone application was first submitted, the pipeline has still not been approved. This is six years too long," he said. "Why did it take Louisiana's senior senator nearly 3,000 days to do something about it? If there was ever legislation that should be easy to get through the United States Senate, it is the Keystone XL pipeline."

He said Louisiana should choose a senator in the Dec. 6 runoff "who will work hard for jobs in Louisiana all the time, not just when their job is on the line."

"On December 6, it's the people of Louisiana's turn to be heard," he said. "We the people of Louisiana will decide whether we want someone in the Senate who represents President Obama or who represents us."

Energy is a multibillion-dollar industry in Louisiana. Landrieu had hoped a successful Keystone vote would bolster her reputation as a fighter for oil and gas. But environmental opposition and Obama administration criticism blocked the legislation, which fell just one vote short of the 60 votes needed for passage on Tuesday.

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