
“U.S. helps sink world’s first global carbon tax,” read the headline. And every American who values common sense should celebrate. [emphasis, links added]
President Trump’s administration stood firm against the United Nations’ attempt to impose a worldwide carbon tax through the International Maritime Organization’s laughable “net zero framework.”
The message couldn’t be clearer: America’s energy policy is made in Washington—not dictated by unelected global bureaucrats.
But while the global carbon tax was stopped abroad, the same idea is being smuggled in here at home—through the courts.
Environmental activists and their trial lawyer allies are attempting to do in the U.S. what the U.N. could not: force a carbon tax on working families.
Recently, one of the attorneys associated with a climate lawsuit got caught telling the truth behind their strategy.
Here’s the full quote in his own words:
“Tort liability is an indirect carbon tax. You sue an oil company; an oil company is liable. The oil company then passes that liability on to the people who are buying its products. In some sense, it is the most efficient way.
“The people who buy those products are now going to be paying for the cost imposed by those products. … [This is] somewhat of a convoluted way to achieve the goals of a carbon tax.”
That’s not spin—it’s a confession.
“The oil company then passes that liability on to the people who are buying its products… The people who buy those products are now going to be paying for the cost imposed by those products.”
Translation: We know working families are going to pay the price.
“Tort liability is an indirect carbon tax. … [This is] somewhat of a convoluted way to achieve the goals of a carbon tax.”
Translation: We know we can’t pass this through Congress, so we’re going through the back door.
Americans already know a carbon tax means higher prices—and they’ve rejected it every time.
According to one poll, more than half 55% say they are unwilling to pay even $1 more per month on their energy bills for climate action. That disapproval skyrockets to 75% when the proposed cost reaches $75 or more per month.
The bottom line is working families won’t support higher energy costs for symbolic climate virtue-signaling.
The Trump Administration understands that carbon taxes—whether global or domestic—hurt working Americans. Now the Supreme Court must decide whether to allow these climate lawsuits to proceed.
Over 100 Members of Congress, led by House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, have urged the Court to reject them, warning that activists are trying to use the judiciary to achieve what Congress has repeatedly refused to do.
If carbon tax proponents truly believe in their cause, they should make their case before Congress. But they won’t. Even the most left-wing members know that voting for a new carbon tax would be political suicide.
So instead, they’re counting on sympathetic courts to do their dirty work. And they’re counting on the public not to notice before it’s too late.
When the lawyers for the environmental movement tell you what they’re trying to do, believe them. They’ve admitted the quiet part out loud: their lawsuits are a carbon tax by another name.
The Supreme Court must see through this scheme and shut it down before Americans are forced to pay the price.
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