Sen. Joe
Manchin of West Virginia informed Democratic leaders Thursday that he
will not support any new climate spending or tax increases targeting the
wealthy and large corporations, sinking his party's revived push for renewable
energy investments and further undercutting the country's ability to rein in
carbon emissions.
While
Manchin's refusal to endorse green energy funding may have been entirely
foreseeable given his close ties to the fossil fuel industry and his role in
tanking the Build Back Better package just months earlier, climate advocates
nevertheless voiced dismay at the power one individual has been able to exert
over a process with implications for billions of people across the planet.
"This is nothing short of a death sentence," warned
Varshini Prakash, executive director of the youth-led Sunrise Movement.
"Our democracy is broken when one man who profits from the fossil fuel
industry can defy the 81 million Americans who voted for Democrats to stop the
climate crisis. It's clear appealing to corporate obstructionists doesn't work,
and it will cost us a generation of voters."
Manchin's
position, which he reportedly laid out during a closed-door meeting with the
Democratic leadership on Thursday, marks a huge setback for the majority
party's last-ditch attempt to assemble a far more limited reconciliation bill
ahead of the pivotal midterm elections, in which Democrats' slim majorities in
the House and Senate are at risk.
The Washington Post, the first outlet to report on the West Virginia
Democrat's stance, noted that party leaders had already "agreed to
surrender their most prized spending proposals, from offering paid family and
medical leave to providing child care, free prekindergarten, and tax benefits
to low-income Americans" in a bid to win Manchin's support, which is
necessary to get a reconciliation package through the Senate.
"In more
recent talks," the Post added,
"[Senate Majority Leader Chuck] Schumer and his colleagues set about
trying to woo the longtime holdout over a scaled-back approach—including tax
credits to spur clean energy, incentives to encourage the purchase of electric
vehicles, and limited penalties on the producers of harmful methane gas."
Sen. Ron
Wyden (D-Ore.), chair of the Senate Finance Committee, told the newspaper that
the collapse of climate talks is a devastating failure. "I'm not going to
sugarcoat my disappointment here, especially since nearly all issues in the
climate and energy space had been resolved," said Wyden. "This is our
last chance to prevent the most catastrophic—and costly—effects of climate
change. We can't come back in another decade and forestall hundreds of
billions—if not trillions—in economic damage and undo the inevitable human
toll."
With new climate and tax provisions off the table, Manchin
reportedly told top Democrats that he's open to letting Medicare negotiate the
prices of a small number of prescription drugs and extending Affordable Care
Act subsidies that are set to lapse in the coming months, which would mean surging premiums for millions of
people.
The removal
of climate provisions from the nascent legislative package is disastrous for
U.S. efforts to bring carbon emissions into line with international targets and
transition the country away from fossil fuels, the primary driver of the
climate crisis.
But it's a
major victory for the powerful and deep-pocketed oil and gas industry, which
has been lobbying aggressively against renewable energy spending. "Manchin
has taken more money from the fossil fuel industry than anyone else in
D.C.," noted Bill McKibben, co-founder
of 350.org. "And the return on that investment has been enormous. Big Oil
got its money's worth a thousand times over."
Morris Pearl, chair of the Patriotic Millionaires—a group that
advocates for higher taxes on the wealthy—said Thursday that "Manchin just
handed victory in America's class war to the billionaires."
"He's
shown he doesn't care about the American people, he only cares about the tiny
wealthy minority of Americans who are opposed to rich people (like his family
and friends who own the coal mining industry) paying taxes," Pearl added.
"Some may be ignorant, some may be corrupt, all are just sad pawns in the
oligarchs' takeover of America."
The closure, for
now, of legislative paths toward climate action spurred fresh calls for
President Joe Biden to do everything he can through executive action. Sen.
Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) tweeted late Thursday that
"it’s now time for executive Beast Mode" from the president, who has
thus far resisted pressure to declare a climate
emergency and take other steps to mobilize federal resources to combat a crisis
whose deadly consequences are becoming more evident by the day. "Do
it all and start it now," Whitehouse demanded.
In a press
release, the Sunrise Movement outlined a list of actions Biden could take
without needing congressional approval:
- End the practice
of leasing public lands and waters for fossil fuel production;
- Stop the
issue of permits for any new fossil fuel infrastructure, including
pipelines, petrochemical plants, and export terminals, especially Line 3,
Line 5, and the Mountain Valley Pipeline;
- Declare a
climate emergency;
- Update and
strengthen outdated standards limiting particulate matter, ozone, carbon
dioxide, sulfur dioxide, mercury, coal ash, and tailpipe emissions, as
well as lead and copper rules preventing contamination of drinking water;
- Finalize new
methane standards for new and existing oil and gas operations, and make
these standards strong enough to cut methane pollution at least 65 percent
below 2012 levels by 2025; and
- Direct the
EPA to designate greenhouse pollutants as criteria air pollutants and set
a science-based national pollution cap under the Clean Air Act.
"We won't
stop fighting," said Prakash. "Biden must declare a climate
emergency, and do everything in his executive power to stop the climate crisis
immediately. That's the only way he can salvage his presidency and save our
generation. And we must uproot this broken system and rebuild it to work for
us."
-Jake Johnson, Common
Dreams
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