“On my first day as president, I will sign an executive order that puts a total moratorium on all new fossil fuel leases for drilling offshore and on public lands. And I will ban fracking—everywhere.” — Elizabeth Warren
The modern, post-Obama Democratic party has little that defines it more clearly and unambiguously than its environmental agenda. …snip…
Disagreement within the Democratic leadership is harder to find, though, on the issue of environmental stewardship.
A strong consensus exists among Democrats that global warming is real, global warming is man-created, and global warming must be addressed through the immediate reduction of carbon emissions by any means necessary.
The controversial congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez made headlines in 2019 with the introduction of what she called the “Green New Deal,” advocating for extreme measures intended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
The plan called for the end of air travel, a federal guarantee to all people of “a job with a family-sustaining wage, adequate family and medical leave, paid vacations, and retirement security,” zero greenhouse-gas emissions within ten years, meeting 100 percent of the power demand in the United States through zero-emission energy sources, and perhaps most outlandishly, “upgrading all existing buildings in the United States to achieve maximal energy efficiency, water efficiency, safety, affordability, comfort, and durability, including through electrification.”
The plan was so radical, many earnest environmentalists and advocates of improved environmental stewardship ran away from it, shocked by its delusional ambitions.
David Brooks said it would be “the greatest centralization of power in the hands of the Washington elite in our history.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi dismissed it as “the green dream, or whatever they call it.”
President Obama’s own secretary of energy, Ernest Moniz, said, “I just cannot see how we could possibly go to zero carbon in the 10-year time frame; it is just impractical.” The Economist called it “deeply unserious.”
The Washington Post, in an op-ed lambasting President Trump for inadequate attention to climate change, called the Green New Deal a “fantasy that hurts the cause of practically addressing the issue,” adding, “the world needs rational U.S. leadership.”
And yet, the response of the Democratic presidential primary field was not to run as far away from this toxic $70 trillion policy proposal as possible, but rather to trip over one another trying to be first in line to support it.
One can chalk up the hasty endorsement of this extremist proposal by Senators Cory Booker, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Kamala Harris to the political opportunism we have come to expect from them, but Senator Warren has built her campaign around having “a plan for that!”—and the Green New Deal is no kind of serious plan at all.
Senator Warren boasted, “I am an original cosponsor of the Green New Deal resolution, which commits the United States to meet 100 percent of our power demand through clean, renewable, and zero-emission energy sources.”
She has since done much to fill out her climate-policy portfolio. Her plans on this front, I will argue, represent not only the most dangerous component of her platform but also the area of her agenda in which she is most politically vulnerable.
Her advocacy of standard fare, such as returning to the Paris Climate Accord, is bad policy to this author, but it is certainly the conventional Democratic-party position.
While a few candidates and former candidates (Cory Booker, Andrew Yang, Michael Bennet) reinforced their anti-carbon bona fides by endorsing greater use of nuclear power, Warren missed the opportunity to show contrarian wisdom and courage by doing so.
As she said in CNN’s Climate Town Hall:
So you rightly point out about nuclear energy, it’s not carbon-based, but the problem is it’s got a lot of risks associated with it, particularly the risks associated with the spent fuel rods that nobody can figure out how we’re going to store these things for the next bazillion years.
In my administration, we’re not going to build any new nuclear power plants, and we are going to start weaning ourselves off nuclear energy and replacing it with renewable fuels over — we’re going to get it all done by 2035, but I hope we’re getting it done faster than that. That’s the plan.
Vehement opposition to the use of carbon-based fuels combined with a demand for a rapid reduction in their use would seem to cry out for embracing nuclear energy, not shunning it.
Yet Warren has opted to stick to her contradictory policy, seemingly unaware of how problematic it is to hold these two positions simultaneously.
As we shall see, though, her rejection of nuclear power hardly represents the most troublesome part of her climate agenda.
Despite her claim to be running a campaign for middle-class America, Warren has advocated taxing carbon emissions, including through a cap-and-trade marketplace, a policy that disproportionately hurts those in the most challenging economic circumstances.
Households in the bottom income brackets spend the highest portion of their income on energy, making a carbon tax among the most regressive of taxes.
Some proposals call for redistributionist mechanisms to offset this regressive unfairness, but of course, Warren’s broad policy platform has already made a claim on every revenue source you can think of for every spending category you can imagine — meaning there is no empty space on the shelf available to simply trade out a carbon tax for a lower payroll tax, and so forth.
And in addition to the regressively unfair nature of this tax, it also serves as a huge subsidy to what Senator Warren loves to call “big oil.”
The great beneficiaries of complexity and of regulatory costs are the big players, not the smaller companies!
Read rest at National Review
Warren and AOC are so stupid that they believe that they’re great patriotic Americans when they’re actually the new communist utopians. Elect them and it’s only a matter of time before they start burning the heretics
Hoiw dumb can the democrats ever be kill jobs just to appease the back to nature freaks i wish Mother Nation would show them her ways and snap up a Storm just like in those old Chiffon Margirne ads
Looks to me like her energy plan is POVERTY. For openers, I highly question whether she can unilaterally cancel all federal oil & gas lease sales on the federal domain. This would appear to be in direct contradiction to congressional authority through the Mineral Leasing Act & Fed Land & Policy Mgmt. Act which provides for the lawful extraction of mineral resources on federally managed land. As for banning fracing, GOOD LUCK trying to enforce that on private land! Basic, long standing property laws & established case law will provide extensive “curtailment” of her executive authority. Every time I see articles like this and the “mantra” about renewables and nuclear power, it is apparent (to me) that she is getting bad advice and has no one on her staff that actually understands our energy system or energy imperatives. Folks will miss fossil fuels if they are gone prematurely. That, you can bet on…