As fires burn the west, top Democrats stay quiet
on the climate crisis
Nancy Pelosi has been notably tepid on green
legislation – so are the Democrats serious about fighting climate change?
Emily
Holden in Washington and agencies
Sat 12 Sep
2020 09.30 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/12/wildfires-democrats-climate-crisis
Nancy Pelosi’s lukewarm response is another sign that
US politicians are far from ready to take concrete steps to deal with the
realities of climate change.
With
hundreds of thousands of Americans forced to evacuate their homes in the
western US, Donald Trump hasn’t said a word about the wildfires blazing across
multiple states in nearly three weeks.
But some
national Democratic leaders also have been slow to call attention to the fires
in California, Oregon and Washington which have killed more than 20, forced
millions to breathe ash from orange-tinted skies that are blocking out the sun,
and seen hundreds of thousands of people flee their homes.
Climate
activists say the tepid political response, particularly from the Democratic
House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, is yet another sign that US politicians are far
from ready to take concrete steps to deal with the realities of climate change,
let alone write laws to stop burning fossil fuels in order to slow its effects.
Another
four years of Trump in office would devastate the international climate
movement, but even a Democratic-controlled government is not guaranteed to
substantially address the crisis.
Last week,
Pelosi barely mentioned the fires, which are ravaging her own home state of
California, until Thursday, when she was asked about them on MSNBC and in a
weekly press conference.
In a
17-minute update for reporters, she spoke of the fires – which are being made
worse by human-induced climate change – just briefly before speaking at length
about what she sees as Republicans’ failed response to the coronavirus .
When asked
if Democrats would pursue major climate change legislation immediately if they
win control of Congress and the White House, Pelosi gave a jumbled answer.
“Well, we
will have … we will have, obviously, hopefully, the Covid pandemic will have
subsided – if there’s any thought that the Republicans in Congress will pay
attention to science,” she said.
“Right now
they’re in a place where they don’t believe in science and they don’t like
governance. So they don’t want any reason to have to govern, to call for
standards to defeat the virus … but the virus, of course – in other words, to
open up our schools and our economy – has to be first and foremost. But yes, it
will be an early part of the agenda.”
Pelosi
added that climate change has long been her “flagship issue”, spoke of a 2005
energy law she helped pass, and noted House Democrats have drafted a climate
report.
Pelosi’s
spokesman, Henry Connelly, pointed to Pelosi’s comments about the wildfires and
climate change in interviews and press conferences two weeks ago, on 26 and 27
August. He said under her leadership the House had made it a priority to pass
climate-focused legislation and noted she was convening the heads of parliament
of G7 nations this weekend on the climate crisis and economic and environmental
justice.
However,
Pelosi has previously mocked the Green New Deal – a progressive proposal for
large-scale spending to fight inequity and the climate crisis simultaneously – calling
it the “green dream”.
So has
Dianne Feinstein, the senior Democratic senator for California, who last year
told children who came to her office to ask her to commit to a Green New Deal
that she disagreed with the plan, including because there was “no way to pay
for it”.
Feinstein,
in a recent op-ed, linked the more intense fires to climate change and called
for policy changes to help communities prepare for and fight fires. But she did
not write about any policies to halt rising emissions.
“You look
up at the sky and you wonder. It’s not just the Republicans who are letting us
down. It’s the Democrats who aren’t fighting for a better climate future
either,” said Rebecca Katz, a progressive political consultant and founder of
New Deal Strategies. “Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has said that climate delaying
is the same as climate denial. And it’s hard not to see that point crystal
clear on a morning like today.”
Joe Biden
has a $2tn plan to try to virtually eliminate climate emissions by 2050, but he
reiterates frequently that he would not try to ban fracking – the process that
has fueled a gas drilling boom in the US. In doing so, he has earned the
support of some reticent labor unions.
“The Biden
campaign understands that a full embrace of an aggressive climate change agenda
could create problems for them in the upper midwest,” said Dan Schnur, who
served as an adviser to the former California governor Pete Wilson and Arizona
senator John McCain. “Trump has shown no desire to talk about California beyond
using it as a liberal punching bag to make his case to his conservative base.”
On
Thursday, Biden’s campaign tweeted a video of the destruction and said: “Make
no mistake: climate change is already here – and we’re witnessing its
devastating effects every single day.
“We have to
get President Trump out of the White House and treat this crisis like the
existential threat that it is.”
Sabrina
Singh, a spokeswoman for Kamala Harris, said Biden and Harris “have been
closely monitoring the wildfires raging across the state and highlighting the
urgent need to address the threat of climate change”.
Barack
Obama also tweeted photos of a glowing, smoke-filled San Francisco and told
followers to “vote like your life depends on it – because it does”.
That’s
compared to Trump, who has held 46 public events since 23 August where he could
have addressed the wildfires but did not, according to a review by the group
Climate Power 2020.
Asked why
he has not done so, the White House spokesman Judd Deere said Trump was
“closely monitoring” the fires and had sent federal funding and personnel to
help states fight them. Deere flagged a tweet noting Trump spoke with
California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, to “express his condolences for the loss
of life and reiterate the administration’s full support to help those on the
frontlines of the fires”.
The
high-profile Democratic nods to the climate crisis are an improvement over just
years ago, when the issue was barely touched upon in presidential debates. Yet
activists say it is not enough. The planet is already 1C hotter than before
industrialization. It is on track to become at least 3C hotter. The wildfire
season is expanding, and climate-fueled drought is making the fires more
dangerous. Stronger hurricanes are ripping apart Gulf coast communities. Iowa
and other midwest states are still reeling from a derecho.
“It’s
unfortunate, given that the speaker’s own district is being impacted by what’s
going on right now,” said Anthony Rogers-Wright, policy coordinator of the
Climate Justice Alliance.
“There are
far too many in Democratic leadership who believe that climate change is a
wedge issue. When what it really is is an issue that if articulated correctly
could bring everyone together.”
On
Thursday, the Climate Justice Alliance joined “a coalition of grassroots
groups, labor unions, Black, Brown and Indigenous leaders” to back a
congressional resolution aimed at “creating nearly 16m good jobs, reviving our
economy, and addressing the interlocking crises of climate change, racial
injustice, public health, and economic inequity”.
Without
saying the words “Green New Deal”, the measure’s goals are closely aligned.
The
resolution has sponsors from across the Democrat political spectrum: senators
Chuck Schumer, Ed Markey, Cory Booker and Elizabeth Warren; and Representatives
Deb Haaland, Debbie Dingell, Donald McEachin, Sheila Jackson Lee, Raul
Grijalva, Rosa DeLauro, Brendan Boyle, Barbara Lee, Ilhan Omar and Ro Khanna.
In a
virtual press conference on Thursday, the Democratic senator Jeff Merkley of
Oregon spoke of the “almost apocalyptic moment” in his state.
He blamed
an influx of “dark money” from the fossil fuel industry in political campaigns,
saying their contributions brought the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell,
to power.
“We are
seeing the regular arrival of larger, more intense disasters that are
absolutely consistent with what happens when you have a warmer planet,” Merkley
said. “We have to now translate that into a determined, hopefully bipartisan,
effort to have a bold, massive undertaking to address it.”
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