Fatal Attraction Climate Bill Appears to Finally Sink into the Bathtub

I've worked for almost 20 years to stop global warming and yet I felt joy when the Senate global warming bill began to unravel. How did we get here?
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Woke to the news, three grim faced men, Senators, said they weren't going to be able to help on global warming. The only Republican supporter of the not yet announced but widely described bill, Lindsey Graham, had a new demand. Not only did he insist that the bill subsidize the building of nuclear power plants and open up our coasts to oil drilling -- conditions since met by the White House -- he wanted the Democrats to hold off immigration reform so it wouldn't hurt some Republicans running for Senate. It's rumored that he also wanted Caps tickets for the final game on Wednesday evening and a guarantee from the White House that they would beat the Canadiens.

Weird. But I felt happy. Which is weirder still. I've worked for almost 20 years to stop global warming and yet I felt joy when the Senate global warming bill began to unravel. How did we get here?

The bill that Senators Kerry, Graham and Lieberman (KGL) keep threatening to introduce is reputed to be more of a polluters' bill than an environmental bill. Massive new subsidies for the coal, oil and gas industries, a new trading scheme for Wall Street (this time in derivatives of carbon pollution instead of mortgages), promised CO2 emissions reductions primarily from ungovernable "offsets" in the developing world, and pre-emption over state effort to stop global warming or even the EPA's recently Supreme Court granted right to do the same.

There are smart people who say that we need a bill on global warming, any bill, and the rest of the world will start moving too. But it seems to me that if we pass a fake bill, it won't be a little first step but rather the last step. And the Chinese, Indians, Brazilians are unlikely to be so ignorant as to watch the Senate pass a fake bill and turn around and make real emissions reductions in their own economies.

But figuring this out isn't my job. I didn't join the environmental movement to try and become a master dealmaker. Let's leave that to the politicians and their staff. I'm more interested in the people building a powerful swell of public support that politicians eventually have to follow. Democracy done right means politicians listen to the people. Not the coal companies or the oil companies or Goldman Sachs.

I come from the American tradition that liberated itself from a corrupt king and which now has to liberate itself from corrupt corporate oligarchs. To do that we'll have to organize in every corner of this fair land and peel the grip of the polluters off the levers of power. But there is one thing we must do first. The original role of the environmental community is to tell the truth. Our role is not to design ever more complex legislative schemes that enrich the oligarchs and confuse the public. The truth is that global warming is bearing down on us and we are not a step closer to solving it than we were 40 years ago.

And yet there is something that I find hopeful, an alternative bill, though the media pretends it isn't there.

The media has been focused on the three men who have been talking about a bill for months while ignoring two women Senators, Democrat Cantwell and Republican Collins, who have actually introduced a bill, the CLEAR Act (the Carbon Limits and Energy for America's Renewal Act). Simple, elegant architecture, it auctions the right to pollute to the importers, drillers and miners of carbon-based fuels that come into the economy. These costs get passed along to you and me so we use less. It works like a tax, increasing the price so we use less carbon-based fuels. That's a good thing. And then it takes most of that revenue and gives a cash payment, every year, to everyone with a social security number.

Top Republican pollster Glen Bolger from Public Opinion Strategies recently polled 1,000 likely voters in five politically moderate to conservative states about their views on climate legislation. According to Bolger: "The CLEAR Act from Cantwell and Collins has the best chance of getting more votes over party lines because people like the concept of less government involvement [and a] tax-cuts-style refund back to the people." Maybe this bill is a better way to get Republican support than to start giving companies the right to drill off our beaches.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot