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Obama selects 3 to Cabinet-level posts

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Her nomination will spark criticism from Republicans, who charge that the agency is killing jobs and undermining the coal industry. Environmentalists will be looking to ensure that McCarthy issues the toughest rules possible, particularly when it comes to controlling emissions from the existing fleet of power plants.

Despite the partisanship in Washington, McCarthy has said the environment is a nonpartisan issue, saying that the choice “doesn’t have to be, ‘Can I have a job or can I breathe clean air.’ ”

But she hasn’t backed down when politicians have falsely portrayed her agency’s work, such as suggesting EPA was poised to regulate cow flatulence to combat climate change and was looking to go after farmers for spilling milk.

“When I listen to their concerns, I am struck by the fact that what they think we are often doing bears little or no relationship to what we are actually doing,” she said in testimony before Congress in April 2011.

Obama called her on Monday “a straight-shooter” who “welcomes different points of views.”

Last year, the American Petroleum Institute praised an EPA rule for which she was responsible because it gave drillers two additional years to curb pollution from recently drilled oil and gas wells.

At the state level, McCarthy pressed for federal action to reduce greenhouse gases and was a key player in setting up the nation’s first mandatory cap-and-trade system to reduce global warming pollution from power plants in 10 states. As head of Connecticut’s environmental department, she is credited with convincing Republican Gov. Jodi Rell not to abolish a 10-state regional pact, even as other Republicans, including Romney, pulled out.

McCarthy was also Connecticut’s point person on the environment when the state joined a lawsuit aimed at forcing the EPA to regulate global warming emissions from automobiles. When the Supreme Court ruled in April 2007 in the state’s favor, McCarthy said “there’s no downside.” Many of the regulations she has helped shape at agency stemmed from that case.

But the state of Connecticut also sued the Bush administration for a limit on ground-level ozone, the primary ingredient in smog, which McCarthy believed was too weak. That standard is still in place, thanks to a decision by Obama to stall the fast-tracking of a stricter smog limit that had been drafted by McCarthy’s division at EPA.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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