Washington (CNN) -- Louisiana
Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu says she has the 60 votes she needs for the
Senate to advance a measure Tuesday that would authorize construction of the
Keystone XL pipeline.
Landrieu has been
scrambling to attract at least 15 Democrats to join 45 Republicans to reach the
critical 60-vote procedural threshold. She told reporters at the Capitol on
Monday night that she'd reached that mark.
At least 14 Democrats
have said they will support the measure. But it's not clear who has agreed to
provide the final vote or whether Landrieu's comments simply reflect optimism.
One of Landrieu's top
targets, West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller, said it won't be him. Another
target, Maine Sen. Angus King, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats,
said he is leaning against supporting the bill.
If she can shepherd
the legislation through the Senate, it would allow Landrieu to demonstrate her
influence one last time ahead of a Dec. 6 run-off election in Louisiana, where
she faces Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy, who sponsored the bill authorizing the
pipeline when the House approved it on Friday.
If the Senate
ultimately passes the Keystone bill, a confrontation could emerge between
Congress and President Barack Obama. The president said at a news conference
late last week that he doesn't want Congress to intervene in the State
Department's long-running consideration of the project -- and offered his most
specific critique of it yet.
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