OPINION
PAUL
KRUGMAN
Another Step Toward Climate Apocalypse
July 4,
2022
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/04/opinion/guns-america-western-mythology.html
We’re
having a heat wave, a tropical heat wave. Also a temperate heat wave and an
Arctic heat wave, with temperatures reaching the high 80s in northern Norway.
The megadrought in the Western United States has reduced Lake Mead to a small
fraction of its former size, and it now threatens to become a “dead pool” that
can no longer supply water to major cities. Climate change is already doing
immense damage, and it’s probably only a matter of time before we experience
huge catastrophes that take thousands of lives.
And the
Republican majority on the Supreme Court just voted to limit the Biden
administration’s ability to do anything about it.
It says
something about the state of U.S. politics that a number of environmental
experts I follow were actually relieved by the ruling, which was less sweeping
than they feared and still left the administration with some possible paths for
climate action. I guess, given where we are, objectively bad decisions must be
graded on a curve.
And for
what it’s worth, I have a suspicion that at least some of the Republican
justices understood the enormity of what they were doing and tried to do as
little as possible while maintaining their party fealty.
For party
fealty is, of course, what this is all about. Anyone who believes that the
recent series of blockbuster court rulings reflects any consistent legal theory
is being willfully naïve: Clearly, the way this court interprets the law is
almost entirely determined by what serves Republican interests. If states want
to ban abortion, well, that’s their prerogative. If New York has a law
restricting the concealed carrying of firearms, well, that’s unconstitutional.
And
partisanship is the central problem of climate policy. Yes, Joe Manchin stands
in the way of advancing the Biden climate agenda. But if there were even a
handful of Republican senators willing to support climate action, Manchin
wouldn’t matter, and neither would the Supreme Court: Simple legislation could
establish regulations limiting greenhouse gas emissions and provide subsidies
and maybe even impose taxes to encourage the transition to a green economy. So
ultimately our paralysis in the face of what looks more and more like a looming
apocalypse comes down to the G.O.P.’s adamant opposition to any kind of action.
The
question is, how did letting the planet burn become a key G.O.P. tenet?
It wasn’t
always thus. The Environmental Protection Agency, whose scope for action the
court just moved to limit, was created by none other than Richard Nixon. As
late as 2008 John McCain, the Republican nominee for president, ran on a
promise to impose a cap-and-trade system to limit greenhouse gas emissions.
Republican
positioning on the environment is also completely unlike that of mainstream
conservative parties in other Western nations. One study — from a few years
back, but I don’t think the fundamentals have changed — found that most
conservative parties do support climate action and that the Republican Party
“is an anomaly in denying anthropogenic climate change.” And yes, the G.O.P. is
still into climate denial; it may sometimes admit that climate change is real
while insisting that nothing can be done about it, but it reverts to denial
every time there’s a cold snap.
So what
explains the Republican climate difference? One natural answer is “follow the
money”: In the 2020 election cycle the oil and gas industry gave 84 percent of
its political contributions to Republicans; for coal mining, the number was 96
percent.
But I
suspect that money is only part of the story; in fact, to some extent the
causation may run the other way, with the fossil fuel sector backing
Republicans because they’re anti-environment rather than the other way around.
My
skepticism about a simple follow-the-money story comes from a couple of
observations. One is that Republicans have staked out anti-science positions on
other issues, like Covid vaccination, where the monetary considerations are far
less obvious: As far as I know, the coronavirus isn’t a major source of
campaign contributions.
Also, while
the Republican position on climate is an outlier compared with “normal”
conservative parties, it’s actually typical for right-wing populist parties.
(Side note: I hate the use of the word “populist” here, because Republicans
have shown no inclination toward policies that would actually help workers. But
I guess we’re stuck with it.)
In other
words, the politics of climate policy look a lot like the politics of
authoritarian government and minority rights: The Republican Party looks more
like Hungary’s Fidesz or Poland’s Law and Justice than like the center-right
parties other countries call conservative.
Why,
exactly, are authoritarian right-wing parties anti-environment? That’s a
discussion for another day. What’s important right now is that the United
States is the only major nation in which an authoritarian right-wing party —
which lost the popular vote in seven of the past eight presidential elections
yet controls the Supreme Court — has the ability to block actions that might
prevent climate catastrophe.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a distinguished
professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman


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