THINK PROGRESS by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, Ryan Powers, and Brad Johnson
The Progress Report
ECONOMY
Green Recovery Now
The American economy has been heading in the wrong direction for seven
years, as conservatives
rewrote the rules of the market
to reward corporate excess and to deprive American families of economic
opportunity. The wave
of toxic debt crashing into Wall
Street is but a symptom of the broken
economic fundamentals that have
made good jobs, good education, and good health care harder to find for
most
Americans year after year. The Bush administration's exploitation
economy has drilled our
nation to the benefit of
oil
companies, multinational
corporations, and billionaire
speculators, leaving the next
administration -- and the next generation of Americans -- with a broken
economy and planet
to repair. The national response
to these crises must be swift and wise, stimulating a green recovery
with the renewable resources of innovation, hard work, and clean
energy. "Green
Recovery," a new report
published by the Center for American
Progress from
the University of Massachusetts Political Economy Research
Institute (PERI), explains how a $100 billion stimulus over
two
years
would create two million new jobs in a clean energy economy, with a
significant proportion in the struggling
construction and manufacturing sectors.
GREEN
RECOVERY NOW: This $100
billion investment is targeted at six
key sectors in building a green
economy today: retrofitting buildings to improve energy efficiency,
expanding mass transit and freight rail, constructing smart electrical
grid transmission systems and investing in wind power, solar power, and
next-generation
biofuels. The vast majority of jobs created would be in already-existing
trades, from machinists
to truck drivers, roofers to engineers. "The
point of view of the Steelworkers
is quite simple," said Leo Gerard, International President of the
United Steelworkers of
America (USW), introducing
the report. "An energy-efficient
green economy creates jobs, and creates
jobs in America." "We
must fundamentally change the way we produce and consume energy
and
dramatically reduce our dependence on oil," explained Center for
American Progress President and CEO John Podesta. "The economic
opportunities
provided by such a transformation are vast, not to mention the national
security benefits of reducing oil dependence and the pressing need to
fight global warming." The Green Recovery program allows Congress
to "spend
less money than it did on the last economic stimulus package, create
more jobs and help stave off
catastrophe via climate change." Most of the stimulus goes
directly to the private
sector, with $50 billion for tax credits and $4 billion for federal
loan guarantees. Approximately $46 billion in direct government
spending would
support public building retrofits, the expansion of mass transit,
freight rail, and smart electrical grid systems. This stimulus should
be
part of a comprehensive
low-carbon energy strategy and
could be paid for with proceeds from auctions of carbon permits under a
greenhouse gas cap-and-trade program.
BENEFITS
TO THE NATION: As the
authors of the report will testify
before Congress on Thursday, the
greatest benefits of investment in a green economy come to those who
have been hardest hit by the pollution-based economy. PERI analyzed the
green job potential for 34 states across the nation, finding that
states with strong industrial sectors and low-income
communities battered by
outsourcing and left behind by Wall Street and Washington, can see the
strongest gains. "This
is an opportunity to help
Americans pull
themselves out of poverty by
investing in the green movement," noted
Rep. Andre Carson (D-IN), whose state has lost 16,000 jobs since
January. "The
price of oil is taking too big a bite
out of working families'
paychecks and eliminating too many jobs," Bruce Roy,
secretary-treasurer of the Maine AFL-CIO, told the Portland
Press-Herald. "Putting up a wind farm creates
jobs for machinists,
truck drivers, electricians and laborers. Making buildings more
energy-efficient requires roofers and insulators." In the words of
Michigan state representative Mark Meadows, "We have workers who are
waiting to go
back to work in Michigan, well
over 60,000
of them who would benefit from a
program like that, because they
have the skill sets that are needed to make this work." Forty-three
thousand
jobs would be created in Missouri,
already benefiting from the
construction of new wind farms and biodiesel plants. Eighty-six
thousand
new jobs in Pennsylvania would
dramatically cut unemployment. Tony
Montana, a spokesman for the USW, told the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, "That potential growth for good,
family-supporting jobs when the economy is down and we see our
manufacturing jobs leaving the country makes it imperative that we take
a long, serious look at green
investment and green energy solutions
for our future and for future
generations."
TAKING
ACTION NOW: The
impending expiration of federal renewable energy tax credits threatens
thousands of
American jobs. Declaring, "America
needs an oil change,"
Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA) fought
back on
the floor of the House
yesterday against the
conservative battle-cry of "Drill, baby, drill!" Last night, the House
voted 236-189 in favor of H.R. 6899, an "all
of the above"
energy bill to invest in renewable energy, raise clean energy
standards, and expand oil production, paid for by removing oil company
tax loopholes. After a month
of complaining that House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) had put Congress on its standard
August recess without a vote on an "all of the above" bill,
conservatives made repeated
motions
to adjourn
to prevent the vote from occurring. President Bush joined the
opposition, threatening
to veto the legislation because
it removes oil company subsidies.
The fight now moves to the Senate, where conservatives have repeatedly
filibustered green
recovery legislation.
Communities are organizing to tell Congress
they are ready for green jobs
now, under the leadership of a
coalition led by Green For All. On Saturday, Sept. 27,
the coalition will launch a national mobilization to say, "I'm ready
for the green
economy." Green Jobs Now
is a National Day of Action that will empower
everyday people to stage hundreds of grassroots events throughout the
country. Van
Jones, founder of Green for All
and a Center for American Progress
senior fellow, writes, "Right now, there are millions of
people ready to
work and countless jobs to be
done that will strengthen our economy
at home."
Under the Radar
CIVIL LIBERTIES --
CONSTITUTION DAY BRINGS RECOMITTMENT TO RULE OF LAW INTO FOCUS: On
the day before today's Constitution
Day --
which celebrates the day the U.S. Constitution was signed,
on Sept. 17, 1787 -- a published excerpt of a new book on Vice
President Cheney revealed that his chief of staff had in effect forged
then-attorney general John Ashcroft's signature
in order to authorize warantless wiretapping. The program was just one
aspect of Bush's disrespect for the Constitution discussed during
yesterday's Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, which Sen. Russ
Feingold (D-WI) called "a
shameful legacy that will haunt our country
for years to come." "We glory in the finely calibrated system of
separated powers bequeathed us by the framers of the Constitution," the
Center for American Progress's Mark Agrast writes in submitted
testimony. "Yet the
Bush administration has subverted that system
by advancing radical and extravagant theories of presidential power.
And for the most part, Congress has acquiesced." Agrast said that the
next president should
make the restoration of the rule of law "an overarching theme
of
his administration" and work with Congress "to restore public
confidence in the rule of law." Harold Koh, dean of Yale Law School,
agreed: "To regain our global standing, the next President and
Congress must unambiguously reassert
our historic commitments to human rights
and the rule of law as a
major source of our moral authority."
ADMINISTRATION -- HOMELAND SECURITY DEPARTMENT
PLAGUED BY FAILED CONTRACTS
AND INEFFECTIVE CYBER SECURITY MISSION:
The Washington Post reports today that "in the five years since it was
created, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has overseen roughly
$15
billion worth of failed contracts."
The figure represents "a third
of the agency's contract spending," according to The
Public
Record.
Projects often "wound up over-budget, delayed or canceled after
millions of dollars had already been spent, according to figures and
documents prepared by the House Committee on Homeland Security." A
panel of experts is scheduled to testify today before the House
Subcommittee on Management, Investigations, and Oversight "on how to
fix
problems with the DHS acquisitions process." Scott Amey, a lawyer for
the Project on Government Oversight, said, "DHS is definitely not the
poster child for good contracting or management." Separately, members
of a bipartisan commission called the DHS response to cyber security
threats "completely
ineffective"
and recommended that the "mission be given to outside agency." A DHS
spokesperson responded by saying that the department needs "more time
to get it right," accusing the commission of "political posturing"
and playing "shell games."
JUSTICE
-- OPRAH CLASHES WITH SEN.
COBURN ON LEGISLATION TO PROTECT CHILDREN:
On Monday, Oprah
Winfrey urged
her viewers
to contact their senators and ask them to support the Protect Our
Children Act (H.R. 3845/S. 1738), which authorizes over $320 million
over the next five years for law enforcement to investigate child
exploitation. "This is what we want to do. Want
to get
these guys and put them in jail,"
said Winfrey of the legislation.
"It's going before the U.S. Senate this month. We only have a few
days." But the bill is being blocked by Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK), who, in
July, successfully
derailed the legislation when
it was included in the "the so-called Coburn omnibus," a package of
nearly 40 uncontroversial bills that extended funding for cancer
research and crime prevention. According to the
Hill, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) "has sent word
to
Senate
Democrats that [he] would like to bring
the so-called Coburn omnibus bill to the floor soon,
setting up a
rematch with the conservative Oklahoma Republican who has often brought
the Senate to gridlock."
Think Fast
"Democrats in Michigan are trying to block what they call a Republican effort to deny voting rights to people facing foreclosure," filing "for an injunction to prohibit the GOP from challenging Michigan voters whose homes are on foreclosure lists." The tactic is a form of "voter caging."
President Bush "will not attack Iran to halt its nuclear weapons program before his term ends in January," former Cheney adviser David Wurmser told The Jerusalem Post yesterday. "No, Bush won't go," said Wurmser, adding that "his certainty" had to do with the fact that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice now has "the upper hand in the administration in her struggle with Cheney."
In her first speech since her husband publicly admitted an extramarital affair, Elizabeth Edwards yesterday said she is discouraged that health care may fall lower in the nation's priorities. "We don't want health insurance, we want health care," she said. "Shame on us if we don't take the momentum…and translate it into a policy."
The House voted Tuesday to end the moratorium on new offshore oil drilling. The measure would “let states decide whether to permit energy exploration 50 to 100 miles off their coasts" and "allow drilling 100 miles or more offshore regardless of a state's wishes."
Even in the midst of a trial over concealing more than $250,000 worth of improper gifts, Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) continues to rake in earmarks for his state. According to an analysis by The Hill, "Stevens's earmark share in the defense bill is more than $200 million," which includes $10 million for a coal-to-liquids facility and "$2 million for hibernation genomics."
In a dramatic reversal last night, the government seized control of the nation's largest insurer, AIG. The Fed agreed to "lend up to $85 billion to AIG," and "the U.S. government will effectively get a 79.9% equity stake in the insurer." The deal "gives the government broad powers to force the sale of assets, cancel dividend payments to shareholders and replace the chief executive."
"Attackers exploded a vehicle bomb outside the main gate of the U.S. Embassy in Yemen on Wednesday in what appeared to be a well-coordinated assault." The attack killed 16 and is the "second attack against the mission in six months."
"The ozone hole over Antarctica, a doorway for harmful solar radiation, is bigger than last year, a worrying sign to scientists studying global warming," according to the World Meteorological Organization. The "area of atmosphere without ozone has grown to 27 million square kilometers (10.4 million square miles), 8 percent larger than the maximum reached in 2007."
And finally: Gold-medalist Olympian Ryan Lochte joined several federal lawmakers on Capitol Hill yesterday at a press conference on muscular dystrophy, a disease to which he lost a family member. Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS) was so excited that he left a luncheon with Vice President Cheney to meet Lochte. "Guess what I'll be telling my wife about when I get home?" he said. At the event, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) admitted that she wasn't a very good swimmer: "I had a little bit of trouble with the deep end in the second grade."
Good News
"The Berkeley City Council late Tuesday unanimously approved a program to give city-backed loans to property owners who install rooftop solar-power systems."
State Watch
MASSACHUSETTS:
"The number of children in the state living in poverty is increasing,
pushing Massachusetts lower in the ranking of states with children in
need."
CALIFORNIA:
State asks judge to reject seizure of $8 billion for prison health care.
CIVIL
RIGHTS: Several groups are
working to expand voter registration in
U.S. territories overseas.
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: The New York Times's
Paul Krugman: Phil Gramm would be
"just the guy" to lead us into a Great Depression.
WONK
ROOM: Five former U.S.
Secretaries of State: "Talk to Iran."
YGLESIAS:
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings is disappointed that American
schools are "behind Denmark and Finland," but she doesn't seem to
consider all the reasons that might be.
COUNTY
FAIR: The dishonesty of
right-wing media critics.
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