By Quill Robinson
Friday, June 17, 2022
Look for shades of green in the red
wave this November. This month, in an announcement that would have been hard to
imagine just a year ago, House GOP leaders unveiled a six-point plan to beat climate change. While President Biden and his allies in
Congress have failed to pass massive climate legislation that would have
exacerbated inflation, Democrats have managed to implement anti-American energy
policies that have discouraged domestic energy production, hurt our energy
security, and sent prices into the stratosphere — without even lowering
emissions.
Republicans, on the other hand, have a
strategy to ease Americans’ pain at the pump while ushering in a U.S. energy
renaissance that will restore our status as an energy superpower and reduce
global carbon emissions. It’s a bold strategy, and a smart one.
Changing the narrative on climate change
is no small task for Republicans. Despite the GOP’s long history of
environmental stewardship, from Theodore Roosevelt’s pioneering conservation
work to Ronald Reagan’s signing of the Montreal Protocol, the party has
struggled to find its footing on environmental issues in recent decades. Many
Republicans worry that overzealous bureaucrats and activists will kill jobs and
stifle America’s economic competitiveness through regulation, all under the
guise of environmental protection. Others suspect that radical activists are using
environmentalism, and climate change policy in particular, as a Trojan horse to
advance a broader progressive agenda. But failing to champion an alternative —
a conservative climate agenda — has allowed misguided liberal policies to go
unchallenged. As a result, millions of climate-conscious voters mistakenly
thought they had to vote for Democrats.
It does not have to be this way.
While radical figures like Congresswoman
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Greta Thunberg are most often associated with
climate activism, climate change is, in fact, a mainstream concern among
Americans. Two-thirds of Americans say that the government is not doing enough to
address the issue, and overwhelming majorities support climate policies — such
as planting trees (90 percent), providing tax credits for carbon capture (84
percent), and restricting power-plant emissions (80 percent). Yet, many
Americans believe the GOP, the party responsible for creating the first
national park and the Environmental Protection Agency, couldn’t care less about
the planet. Only 39 percent of young people believe that Republicans care about climate
change, but 73 percent say that Republicans should.
Seeing this dilemma, some in the GOP have
worked to change the party’s reputation. In Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis set
aside hundreds of
millions of dollars to protect the Everglades and
made significant
investments to strengthen coastal infrastructure
threatened by rising sea levels. At the federal level, Republicans have
championed policies like the Growing
Climate Solutions Act, which
incentivizes farmers and ranchers to adopt climate-smart practices, and
the Energy Act of
2020, a historic investment into clean energy
that President Trump signed into law. Last year, Representative John Curtis of
Utah founded the Conservative
Climate Caucus. The group of climate-minded
Republicans has swelled to over 70 members, making it the second-largest caucus
in Congress. Republicans are dispelling the myth that only liberals care about
the environment.
These steps are encouraging, but to break
the Democrats’ monopoly on the issue and challenge their counterproductive
climate agenda, Republicans must go further. They need stronger climate
solutions and a strategy to communicate them to everyday Americans.
The House GOP’s plan does just that. It is
made up of six pillars: “Unlock America’s Resources,” “Beat China and Russia,” “Let America
Build,” “Build Resilient Communities,” “American Innovation,” and “Conservation
with a Purpose.” Over the summer, Republicans plan to hold events addressing
each of the pillars, highlighting policy solutions that will lower
greenhouse-gas emissions while boosting the U.S. economy and energy security.
Some of the policies that fall under the
plan, such as investing in clean-energy technologies and planting trees, have
bipartisan support. Democrats will criticize other elements that are vital for
successfully addressing climate change, which will present an opportunity for
Republicans to differentiate their approach. For example, Democrats have
consistently fought against efforts to reform the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA), but even environmentalists now acknowledge that broad deployment of clean energy and infrastructure will
require significant regulatory streamlining.
Nuclear energy is another area where
liberal hypocrisy has thwarted energy security and climate progress. Despite
nuclear being the most reliable and largest source of clean energy in the U.S.,
liberal activists have worked to shutter plants like New York’s
Indian Point. Protecting the existing nuclear fleet
and investing in next-generation
nuclear technologies will be a hallmark of the Republican
climate strategy.
Natural gas is another area where
Republicans differ from many on the left. While natural gas is a fossil fuel,
it burns far cleaner than the coal it often replaces. In fact, GOP-supported
innovation in the oil and gas sector enabled this fuel switching — and is
the biggest reason why the U.S. has reduced emissions more than the rest of the
developed world combined since 2005. Republicans rightfully support the export
of American natural gas around the world and the effort to scale carbon-capture
technology, further reducing emissions.
What truly differentiates this new
strategy from the approach Democrats have promoted for years is the scope.
Republicans recognize that climate change is an inherently global problem.
While the United States should certainly play a leading role in responding to
global climate change, we only produce 11 percent of the world’s carbon emissions. The Democrats’ prescription —
taxing, regulating, and restricting the U.S. economy — will only, at best, put
a dent in that 11 percent. Republicans will instead reduce emissions around the
world by increasing American energy production of all types, holding China
accountable for contributing more than a quarter of the world’s carbon
emissions, and manufacturing more products here in the U.S. that can be
exported. This strategy is not just an alternative to the Green New Deal or
Build Back Better; this strategy is a fundamentally new and more effective
approach that addresses the root of the problem.
Climate change will not make or break the
Republicans’ bid to retake the House this fall. Nevertheless, the long-term
sustainability of the GOP hinges on Republicans’ ability to show voters that
they do take climate change seriously. If Kevin McCarthy does ride a red wave
into the speaker’s office, the success of his new majority will, in part, be
measured by his ability to execute this new climate agenda.
Teddy Roosevelt helped a rapidly growing
nation conserve its natural heritage for future generations. Ronald Reagan took
swift, decisive action to stop the world from burning a hole in the atmosphere.
The Republican Party is at its best when it remembers that there is nothing
more conservative than conserving the environment. Now, with their new climate
plan, Republicans in Congress are ushering in a new era for their party and the
environmental movement.
No comments:
Post a Comment