Just about one year ago today, Barack Obama was inaugurated as
President. Hopes were high among progressive-minded people,
including climate activists. Finally, we had a President who got
it on the need for action to address the deepening climate
crisis.
But here we are a year later and things look very different. The
United States, including Obama, played a generally problematic
role up to and at the Copenhagen climate conference, dismissing
the widespread call by a big majority of the world's countries
for emissions reductions consistent with the climate science.
The Obama administration played this role despite the
bad-weather impacts and sea level rise already being seen and
felt in Africa, small island nations and elsewhere.
As far as the U.S. Congress, Obama has certainly not made it a
priority so far to advance efforts to enact climate legislation
in this session. It's looking very possible, even likely, that
no comprehensive climate legislation will be passed in 2010.
Of course, what's needed is not just any piece of comprehensive
legislation. A bad or weak bill will be worse than nothing,
given that it's critical that we make the turn away from fossil
fuels in the next several years. A bad bill described as an
answer by politicians eager to point to a Congressional victory
will be difficult to correct until it is given time to play
itself out, time we don't have.
What are the key elements of a good bill? The Energy Action
Coalition, at its huge, 12,000 person Power Shift conference
last February, summarized it this way in their demands on
Congresspeople:
-Rebuild the Economy with Green Jobs
-100% Clean Energy, Not Coal
-Cut Carbon 40% by 2020
-Real Carbon Reductions, Not Offsets
-No Giveaways to Polluters, 100% Auction
What should the climate movement be doing to advance these
objectives?
What about a spring campaign of sit-ins on Capitol Hill and at
the offices of Senators obstructing progress on climate
legislation? We can take up the call by Al Gore and others that
Congress pass legislation by the 40th anniversary of Earth Day
and give that call some real substance, make it more than just
words.
This would definitely be something new for the climate movement.
Up to now, with a few exceptions, polite lobbying has been not
just the tactic but the basic strategy of the vast majority of
mainstream environmental and climate groups working for federal
climate legislation. And where has the use of this tactic,
alone, gotten us? Essentially nowhere, nowhere close to what we
urgently need.
It's time, it's past time, to try something different.
But, some will say, isn't it too late? Given all of the
political energy expended on the health care battle, with the
elections happening later this year, and with other important
legislative priorities like unemployment and financial industry
reform, what are the chances that a sit-in campaign can be
effective?
Here's how I'd answer that.
First, what climate and enviro groups have been doing up to now
isn't working. Not only is it uncertain if climate legislation
will be up next after healthcare, but the currently-dominant
Senate legislative alternative, centered around efforts taking
place between Joe Lieberman, Lindsey Graham and John Kerry, will
be even worse than the problematic Waxman-Markey bill passed by
the House in late June of last year.*
Secondly, given the urgency of the climate crisis, strategic and
focused nonviolent direct action (nvda) is very much called
for, as widely and massively as possible, at a whole range of
targets, not just Congress. A well-organized nvda campaign this
spring focused on the Senate could well attract media attention
and play a positive role as far as movement-building.
Third, given the emphasis that so many groups have correctly put
on trying to get climate legislation passed in this legislative
session (really, in 2009), it would not be good for our
movement's morale for us to, in essence, give up prematurely on
that objective. In the trite but true slogan, "quitters never
win, winners never quit."
Finally, whatever happens as far as climate legislation this
spring, a strong and broad campaign that includes organized
sit-ins on Capitol Hill and in Senate offices will generate
energy and momentum to keep bringing political pressure on
candidates running for federal office to speak out on where they
stand on climate issues. It will let both Republicans and
Democrats know that they can expect to feel the heat if they
take the wrong positions or waffle.
Martin Luther King, Jr. understood that political movements, to
be ultimately successful, need to stay active, need to keep
pushing the envelope, need to up the ante. On this weekend when
we remember his life and his death, we would do well to reflect
on his personal willingness to do so and the impact that this
life-decision, made by him and many others within the civil
rights movement, had on human history.
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*Fortunately, there is a much better bill, the CLEAR Act,
introduced by Maria Cantwell and Susan Collins a month ago,
although it does need strengthening. The 2020 targets are too
weak, and it mandates emissions reductions starting only in
2015, definitely too late.
Ted Glick is a co-founder of the Climate Crisis Coalition and
Policy Director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. He
recently completed a book, "Love Refuses to Quit: Climate Change
and Social Change in the 21st Century," available on-line at
http://www.tedglick.com .