The Exxon lobbyist who got caught on tape talking about how the company manipulates politicians is no longer employed.
By Molly Taft
Wednesday 11:20AM
Source: Gizmodo.com
Remember the Exxon lobbyist who got caught on tape admitting that the company had poured money into “shadow groups” in order to fight against climate science? He’s officially out of a job. E&E News confirmed with Exxon on Tuesday that Keith McCoy, the lobbyist in question, was no longer at the company.
“Mr. McCoy no longer works for the company,” Exxon spokesperson Casey Norton said in an email to E&E News. “This is a private personnel matter, and we will decline to comment further.”
For those who need a refresher, investigators at Unearthed posed as recruitment consultants looking to hire a DC lobbyist for a major client and set up interviews with two then-Exxon employees (the other interviewee left the company before the exposé aired). The secret tapes were released in July, and McCoy’s interview was far and away the more explosive of the two.
In addition to talking about the company’s history of perpetuating climate denial, McCoy also openly admitted that Exxon sees a carbon tax, which it has vocally supported, as nothing more than an “advocacy tool” He talked up all the politicians he’s regularly in touch with. His metaphor for capturing them—“you have bait, you fill that bait out and they say, ‘oh you want to talk about infrastructure,’ and then you start to reel them in”—is a pretty stunning admission of how things work. In a separate video released a day after the first, McCoy laid out in detail how Exxon is working behind-the-scenes to fight plastics regulation. McCoy later apologized on LinkedIn, the number one social network for Oil Guys Who Love To Post. But apparently it wasn’t enough to save his job.
Exxon wouldn’t tell E&E News when exactly McCoy left, and his LinkedIn still lists him as employed at Exxon. McCoy still seems to have a role at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, but, per web archives recovered by E&E News, sometime between August 14 and September 8, the website changed his affiliation from “ExxonMobil Corporation” to “Community Advocate.”