Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumThe Next Political Shitshow On Climate: Not What, But When
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As risible as Lees can-kicking is, the optimist in me glimpses some progress for the GOP. The senator acknowledged two things that much of his party, including the president, still refuses to accept: Humans are warming the planet, and humans will need to do something about it. Lee isnt the only conservative lawmaker trending that way, either. Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida and Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee are offering (baby-free) legislative responses to the Green New Deal, dubbed the Green Real Deal and the New Manhattan Project for Clean Energy, respectively. Both are heavy on R&D half-measures focused on conservative favorites like carbon-capture and nuclear energyand neither set serious emission targetsbut both explicitly acknowledge the reality that climate change poses a threat to mankind. Other GOP senators, including Mitt Romney, Lindsey Graham, Lisa Murkowski, and even Mitch McConnell now grudgingly acknowledge that fact as well, as do the several dozen House Republicans in the bipartisan Climate Solutions Caucus formed last Congress to educate members on economically-viable options to reduce climate risk. This all represents a significant change from four years ago, when most GOP leaders wore full-fledged climate denial as a badge of honor.
To be clear, Republicans saying climate change needs to be addressed in the future is just a different way of saying it doesnt need to be addressed now. Its also only a step forward when viewed through a narrow lens. It wasnt all that long ago that 10 GOP senators crossed the aisle in 2005 to vote with Democrats on a resolution that acknowledged not only mankinds role in climate change but also called for the government to actually do something about it. One of those Republicans, the late John McCain, would win the GOP nomination in 2008, the same year Newt Gingrich sat on a couch with Nancy Pelosi and told Americans our country must take action to address climate change. Things got much worse before they got slightly less worse.
Still, the latest change in posture suggests that the GOP is starting to feel the heat from an American public that is increasingly worried about climate change. According to the latest survey taken by the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, the number of Americans who say they are either alarmed or concerned about the issue has doubled in the past five years to 59 percent, while the number who are doubtful or dismissive has dropped by more than half to just 18 percent. Voters growing acceptance of the problem is undeniably good news, but being concerned is not the same as being concerned enough. In a Pew Research Center poll early this year, global warming came in second from the bottom on a list of Americans 18 top policy priorities26 percentage points behind the economy. Theres a reason that almost all the Senate Democrats, with Ocasio-Cortezs blessing, voted present when McConnell pulled his own Green New Deal stunt this week.
If the federal government is going to take meaningful action to avert the worst impacts of climate change, its going to take buy-in from both sides of the aisleand soon. We shouldnt celebrate Republicans showing up late to the table, and certainly not for showing up at the front door with a Sharknado 4 poster while their friends in the administration are finding ways to roll back the limited progress that has already been made. But for the first time in roughly a decade, the climate debate in Washington is changing, however slightly. If it gets us even a little closer to a meaningful debate, I say bring on the Star Wars gimmicks. With Donald Trump in the White House, they may be our only hope.
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https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/03/mike-lee-tauntaun-climate-change-alexandria-ocasio-cortez.html
mountain grammy
(26,624 posts)It's usually a 10 to 15 second segment, but they say the words, now that conservatives have given their permission.. Progress?