Forget, for the time being, US Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) suggesting, at a May 11 Senate Finance Committee hearing, that a ConocoPhillips May 11 press release headline (âConocoPhillips Highlights Solid Results and Raises Concerns Over Un-American Tax Proposals at Annual Meeting of Shareholdersâ) questioned his patriotism and required an apology. Ignore for the moment Sen. Ron Wydenâs (D-Ore.) continued skepticism when executives from US oil companies operating overseas said their firms are truthfully separating royalties from taxes paid to foreign governments in their US Internal Revenue Service filings.It was John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.) who got to the heart of the matter when he said the 5 witnesses âget caught up in your profits and canât understand the concept of sharing. You seem out of touch not only with what weâre trying to do, but also with the American people. I donât think you have any idea what the size of your profits does to their ability to accept what you say.âWitnesses reiterated statistics showing that the oil and gas industry is the most heavily taxed US business, and studies showing that greater access to domestic oil and gas resources would generate more government revenue than increasing the industryâs taxes. None of this seemed to matter to the committeeâs Democrats. They apparently were determined to get so-called Big Oil to pay a bigger share to help reduce the budget deficit.With the exceptions of Louisianaâs Mary L. Landrieu and Alaskaâs Mark Begich, Senate Democrats overall believe that requiring the nationâs 5 biggest oil companies to surrender tax deductions enjoyed by smaller producers and the rest of American business is a small price to pay because the majors made so much money in 2011âs first quarter. âWe have a responsibility to review everything,â said Debbie Stabanow (Mich.). âTaxpayers expect us to ask tough questions. Itâs very appropriate to look at whether a tax deduction which was enacted in 1916 is still appropriate. Itâs not that we donât want you to be successful. It just may not make sense to subsidize what youâre doing.âThomas R. Carper (Del.) said that congressional Democrats and Republicans have been conferring with the administration on ways to reduce the federal budget deficit. âWe basically were told to look in every nook and cranny,â he said. âThereâs a strong belief in this country that some of the tax deductions for your industry do not get us results we deserve. Weâre going to vote on this bill sometime next week, but it should not be the end of the conversation. Later this year, weâre going to vote on reducing the deficit by some $4 trillion and everything will be on the table.âExxonMobil Corp. chief executive Rex W. Tillerson responded that the nationâs top multinational oil company supports comprehensive tax reform. âEverything should be on the table. If youâre going to repeal Section 199, repeal it for everyone,â he said. âThe object is to create conditions for greater investment in this country. Thatâs where a lowering of general rates would help. The foreign tax code needs an overhaul as a well. The principals we live by are to make US investments attractive and donât harm US operations overseas.ââI donât think the American people want shared sacrifice,â observed Chevron Corp. chief executive John W. Watson. âThey want shared prosperity. Oilfield workers who canât work today because their companies canât receive drilling permits or access to more leases feel the pain.âThat idea did not sit well with Rockefeller. âI think the main reason youâre out of touch, particularly with respect to Americans as we try to balance the budget, is that you always prevail in the halls of Congress for a variety of reasons from your lobbyists to where you do business,â he said. âThe size of the amount of money you make is hard for average people in West Virginia to understand. Theyâve always in the process of losing. Everything is an uphill battle. My view is that Iâm holding onto a huge boulder with 2 hands and trying to push it uphill. If I take one hand off, the boulder and I disappear into the gulch.âI have never seen any industry so successful that it gives you a sense of assurance I donât see from the steel or automobile executives Iâve seen sitting there at the witness table,â he continued. âI donât think you have any reason to feel threatened because of how votes line up in this Congress. But I yearn for at least one of you to see what American people are facing in terms of losing health and unemployment insurance, and consider what you can do to address that.âThe Menendez billâs chances of passing the full Senate when it comes to a vote arenât good. The hearing about it revealed a deeply felt attitude among most Democrats on that side of the Capitol that the industry is a perfect tax increase target because they believe it isnât paying its fair share now. Itâs an attitude that could make matters difficult if this committee begins the serious deficit reduction discussions its chairman, Max Baucus (D-Mont.), wants later this year.