Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumGOP Performative Climate Bullshit Stumbles On Without Action Or Meaning
Every few months, a major publication will publish a story profiling Republicans who are reportedly evolving on climate changemeaning shifting from hard-core climate denial to an acknowledgment of objective reality. Sometimes, these pieces will report that these Republicans support a carbon tax. Others look at GOP tree-planting plans. This quarters versionrunning in both Politico and the The Wall Street Journalfocuses on another familiar topic: a caucus with the word climate in its name. That the Houses three-year old, 82-member Conservative Climate Caucus has virtually nothing to show for itself doesnt much matter. There are Republicans who are saying the word climate; apparently, thats newsworthy enough.
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Politico credits Curtis with leading a small but growing number of Republicans advocating action. Theres a bit of a tension, this piece suggests, between their innovation-focused approach to climate issuesan emerging Republican climate strategyand Donald Trumps steadfast rejection of climate science. Yet these Republicans arent breaking ranks with Trump. Theyre not reaching across the aisle to vote for climate policy and, in many cases, are in fact leading the charge against attempts to reduce emissions through both legislation and executive action.
What are members of the purportedly growing Republican movement to engage on climate issues, per the Journal, up to? Conservative Climate Caucus member Bill Huizenga is plotting to strike down the Securities and Exchange Commissions recently finalized climate disclosure rules using the Congressional Review Act. Hes also taken $348,800 from PACs linked to energy and natural resource interests since first coming to Congress in 2008. North Carolina Congressman Patrick McHenryanother caucus membersimilarly announced a pair of hearings to probe this disastrous rule, as he called it. Since his first run for Congress in 2004, McHenry has accepted $616,750 from PACs linked to the energy and natural resources sector.
There are a few reasons why Republicans might claim to care about the climate crisis. For the small minority of politicians who happen to represent the tiny sliver of congressional districts that are actually competitive, it might be a way to win over voters who care about the issue. It can help them line up lucrative gigs after their tenure on the Hill, whether on speaker circuits or in lobby shops. Republicans Bob Inglis and Carlos Curbeloforerunners of the Republicans-who-care-about-the-climate griftare still regularly quoted as experts on the subject. A caucus with climate in the name, moreover, can also be a convenient soapbox for Republicans who take money from the fossil fuel corporations to spew that industrys talking points. Oil and gas companies have long talked up their green bona fides, and having Republicans champion their chosen set of solutions is likely a good deal more strategic than asking them to drone on about climate change being a hoax. The fact that these solutionscarbon taxes that wont pass, carbon offsets that arent real, and industry methane initiatives that arent bindingarent solutions tends to get lost in the ensuing good press.
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https://newrepublic.com/article/179740/conservative-climate-caucus-john-curtis