The formerly staunch anti-drilling advocate Obama has now appeared to rapidly backtrack on the subject in an interview today with the (excellent) St. Pete Times as he travels the state of Florida - a state where now well over 50% of residents support offshore drilling. Is he pandering just as he is slipping in the Florida polls?

Obama’s stance on new oil drilling off the U.S. coasts had consistently been very hard-line in opposition to McCain’s support for drilling. Both the candidate and his campaign had given no intention that such oppo was set to waver, always dismissing drilling as a risky temporary fix and even putting out TV ads making it clear that Obama’s energy plan did not include offshore drilling.

That appears to have shifted as he campaigns in Florida, a state now in recession and hit especially hard by high gas prices in a land of McMansions and congested highways far from urban centers and job hot spots.

Obama today…

Long an opponent of offshore drilling, Sen. Barack Obama offered encouraging words for a bipartisan energy plan that would permit oil drilling within 50 miles of Florida’s west coast.In an interview with the St. Petersburg Times and Bay News 9’s Political Connections this morning, Obama commended the self-styled “Gang of 10″ senators who earlier in the day introduced a broad energy bill that also would funnel billions into developing renewable sources.

“My attitude is that we can find some sort of compromise,” Obama told the Times shortly after talking with voters at Gibbs High School. “If it is part of an overarching package, then I am not going to be rigid in preventing an energy package that goes forward that is really thoughtful and is going to really solve the problem.”

In the interview, Obama reiterated his belief that “we are not going to drill our way out of this problem. We have 3 percent of the world’s oil reserves. We use 25 percent of the world’s oil.

“And what I’ve also said is, if people are expecting short-term relief because of offshore drilling, then they’re not going to find it because we won’t see a drop of oil for at least a decade.”

“So what I want to do is just to make sure that we are putting together the kind of comprehensive plan that is going to work. And if you have a package that is offshore drilling only, which is essentially what Bush and McCain have been emphasizing, then I think that that is not going to solve the problem and I would be opposed to that.”

It was clear that Obama had to make some sort of centrist shift on offshore drilling with public support growing for it and McCain continuously rubbing his nose in his strict oppo to it. But isn’t this a bit too obvious? It won’t cause as many headaches as his stubborn refusal to back a drilling plan, but it will grab some negative headlines. Flip-flop, flip-flop…

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