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BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg, who has faced criticism for not being more visible in BP's response to the Gulf spill, is scheduled to meet with Obama at the White House on Wednesday and likely will be accompanied by CEO Tony Hayward and other BP executives. It will be the first time Obama has met with BP officials since the oil spill crisis began April 20. Hayward, who has been a target of criticism because of a number of ill-advised comments he has made, also will be the key witness at a House hearing on Thursday where he is likely to be closely questioned by lawmakers concerning BP's cleanup efforts and its commitment to people and businesses who have been economically harmed by the spill. Members of Congress, both Republicans and Democrats, have been sharply critical of BP, which owns the well that exploded, unleashing the massive spill. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is among a number of lawmakers who have called on BP to suspend its dividend payments. The chief executive of Britain's National Association of Pension Funds said Friday that investors might be receptive to a dividend suspension to protect the company's long-term economic future. Whatever that future will be, for the time being BP remains the No. 1 environmental villain in the eyes of many Americans
-- and that is unlikely to change until the flow of oil from its damaged well is stopped.
[Associated
Press;
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