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Think Progress

March 20, 2009
by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, Ryan Powers, and Brad Johnson
ENERGY

Powering A Green Economy

As he promised during his campaign, President Obama has laid out a new direction on energy policy with his long-term budget proposal, making polluters pay to reduce global warming pollution, build a green economy, and deliver tax credits to 95 percent of working families. This plan has come under withering attack by conservatives, who have focused on the cap-and-trade carbon market component. After former House speaker Newt Gingrich told the Conservative Political Action Conference that cap and trade is a "code word" for an "energy tax," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) called it a "light switch tax" and House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) said it was a "code for increasing taxes and killing American jobs." Moderate Democratic senators have also expressed concern: Sen. Ben Nelson (D-NE) worries cap and trade "could have a negative impact on our economy by raising utility rates on consumers," Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA) is "against forcing petrochemical companies" to "bear the brunt of new costs," and Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND) "said that it would be a 'distant hope' to expect the climate change plan to pass unless it includes help for industries that would be hit hard by limits on carbon emission production." In reality, Obama's proposal would directly increase or leave untouched the incomes of most Americans when the system begins in 2012, powering a clean job engine that makes work -- instead of pollution -- pay.

CAP AND TRADE 101: Because the "future of our society depends on effectively managing and reducing greenhouse gas emissions," the goal of cap and trade is to "steadily reduce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions economy-wide in a cost-effective manner." The "cap" is an annual limit on total pollution; large emitters (such as power plants and petroleum refineries) must acquire pollution allowances from the government. These allowances can be traded, "rewarding the most efficient companies and ensuring that the cap can be met at the lowest possible cost to the economy." Because the United States has not had an emissions policy, there's a lot of low-hanging fruit -- ways to achieve significant reductions in pollution at low cost or even net gain. California's experience with greening its economy is perhaps the best model of our national future. Despite higher electricity rates than much of the nation, total energy costs have gone down, allowing "more job creation from Californians for California." Economic models find that any downward economic impact of the transition to a clean economy through cap and trade is dwarfed by the high volatility of fossil fuel prices.

A CLEAN JOB ENGINE: As McKinsey and Company has found, putting a cap on carbon emissions corrects market failures by driving investment into efficiency and fuel economy improvements that actually save everyone money. Then it spurs investment into the expansion of renewable energy, creating new jobs and a competitive advantage in the international marketplace. Despite conservative claims, environmental protection creates economic growth. When a cap-and-trade program to stop acid rain pollution from power plants was established in 1990, as Center for American Progress Senior Fellow Daniel J. Weiss explains, industry studies included "hysterical predictions" about "the loss of tens of thousands of jobs, and compliance costs totaling tens of billions of dollars." In reality, pollution reductions cost "one quarter of original EPA estimates," electricity rates fell 10 percent, and the U.S. economy added 16 million new jobs." "American ingenuity and American entrepreneurship and inventiveness," Obama told industry executives last week, "created options that ended up being much cheaper than anybody had imagined." The scope of a carbon cap-and-trade system is much greater. Instead of a billion-dollar-a-year market, it's a $50 to $100 billion market. Conservatives say this size should instill fear about the future of our economy, but history tells us it's a reason for optimism.

FROM GRAY ECONOMY TO GREEN: The economic, security, and climate crises are interlinked by our unsustainable dependence on fossil fuels. Failing to halt global warming "will have severe economic consequences," Obama has explained, "as well as political and national security and environmental consequences." However, "I think we can handle this problem." The Congressional Budget Office has found that a cap-and-trade plan along the lines of Obama's proposal -- making industry pay for pollution permits in a full auction and returns revenues to working families -- would make the most vulnerable "better off as a result of the policy (even without including any benefits from reducing climate change)." Critics are also looking at one element -- the mandatory emissions reductions -- and ignoring the whole. Because a coherent energy policy is critical to our nation's future, Obama's proposed plan goes far beyond capping emissions to reform the transportation and electricity infrastructure, prioritize energy efficiency, transform the housing industry, and create millions of new high-paying jobs.

UNDER THE RADAR

ECONOMY -- PALIN REJECTS RECOVERY FUNDING FOR ALASKA SCHOOLS:   Following the lead of the other 2012 GOP presidential contenders, Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK) announced yesterday that she would reject nearly half the $930 million Alaska was set to receive from the economic recovery package, saying she disagrees with the "'strings' attached to federal stimulus funding." The rejected funds were originally allocated for programs in education, health care, and labor, the largest being $160 million to Alaska schools "for programs to help economically disadvantaged and special needs students." During the press conference announcing her decision, Palin asked, "Will we chart our own course, or will Washington (D.C.) engineer it for us?" "We are not requesting funds intended to just grow government. ... In essence we say no to operating funds for more positions in government," she added. Palin said that she would "work with the [Alaskan] Legislature if it decides that it wants to go ahead and accept the money," but "she didn't rule out vetoes" if the legislature attempted to bypass her with a resolution nullifying the her decision. 

CONGRESS -- DESPITE STRONG PENTAGON SUPPORT FOR CHRIS HILL, GOP SENATORS STILL WORKING TO BLOCK HIS NOMINATION: Earlier this month, Sens. John McCain (R-AZ) and Lindsey Graham (R-SC) announced their opposition to the nomination of Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill to be the next U.S. Ambassador to Iraq. "While Mr. Hill is a talented diplomat who has served our country for many years, his selection for this post concerns us," said the two senators in a statement. The McCain/Graham statement was the first shot fired by "a cadre of Senate Republicans" aiming to sink Hill's nomination. But the senators' effort to derail Hill took a major hit yesterday when Foreign Policy's Laura Rozen reported that "Centcom commander Gen. David Petraeus, top Iraq commander Gen. Raymond Odierno, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates are frustrated by the delay in getting a U.S. ambassador confirmed and into place in Iraq." Though Rozen's initial report was based on anonymous sources, she later updated with an on the record statement from the Pentagon: "Generals Odierno and Petraeus have come out very publicly and very forcefully in support of Amb. Hill's nomination." The pushback from Petraeus must be especially stinging considering the high esteem that senators like Graham and McCain have for the general. Former McCain aide Michael Goldfarb wrote at the Weekly Standard that Petraeus and Odierno's support for Hill deals "a serious blow to the campaign against his appointment." Despite the support for Hill at the Pentagon, Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS) announced yesterday that he intended to do "everything I can to hold up this nominee."

VETERANS -- JOBLESS RATE FOR VETERANS 'SIGNIFICANTLY HIGHER' THAN FOR NON-VETERANS: Last year, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) released a report finding that "recently discharged veterans are having a harder time finding civilian jobs and are more likely to earn lower wages for years due partly to employer concerns about their mental health and overall skills." New statistics appear to support the VA's finding. According to the Labor Department and military officials, the jobless rate for veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan has hit 11.2 percent, an increase of 4 percentage points from last year and "significantly higher than the corresponding 8.8% rate for non-veterans in the same age group." The poor job market for veterans has led to an increase in re-enlistment. "Obviously the economy plays a big role in people's decisions," says Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, an Army spokesman. Many veterans also end up joining the ranks of the homeless upon returning from the battlefield as "[m]ost have no specialized job experience, education or an easy familiarity with civilian life. And many have post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), making it difficult to get along with friends and family, and almost impossible to hold down a job." While there are as many as 200,000 homeless veterans in the U.S., somewhere between 2,000 and 3,000 served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

THINK FAST

Yesterday the House overwhelmingly (329-93) approved "a near total tax on bonuses paid this year to employees of the American International Group and other firms that have accepted large amounts of federal bailout funds." Despite questions of legality, members of Congress said the 90 percent tax on bonuses for those making over $250,000 "was the quickest way" to quell Americans' anger.

"At least 13 companies receiving billions of dollars in bailout money owe more than $220 million in unpaid federal taxes," said Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) yesterday. Lewis, who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee's subcommittee on oversight, said that "two companies owed more than $100 million each." "This is shameful; it is a disgrace," said Lewis.

11.2 percent: The 2008 jobless rate for "veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan and who are 18 and older." This number rose 5 percent from the previous year and is "significantly higher than the corresponding 8.8% rate for non-veterans in the same age group."[

Former senator Tom Daschle pens an op-ed in today’s Washington Post, writing, "It was flattering to hear people say that I was somehow essential to health reform. But I always knew that wasn't true." Daschle argues that the “unwavering commitment to this issue” from President Obama, the "broad support" from Congress, and the urgency felt by the American public will make sure that reform is enacted.

Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND), chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, has "projected deficits far higher than the Obama administration had calculated" for the President's budget, "possibly as much as $1.6 trillion higher over the next 10 years." The Congressional Budget Office "is expected to issue a similar assessment today."

Attorney General Eric Holder issued new guidelines yesterday advising federal agencies to release records and information to the public unless foreseeable harm would result. Holder’s directive fleshes out "President Obama's order of Jan. 21 to provide more government records to the public under the Freedom of Information Act, whenever their release is not prohibited by another law."

The U.S. Senate on Thursday confirmed Elena Kagan as U.S. solicitor general by a vote of 61-31. Kagan will be the first woman to hold the job.

Yesterday, U.S. Dictrict Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly blocked a “last-minute rule enacted by President George W. Bush allowing visitors to national parks to carry concealed weapons." Kollar-Kotelly wrote in a ruling that government officials had "'abdicated their Congressionally-mandated obligation’ to evaluate environmental impacts" of the rule.

And finally: President Obama made headlines last month when he gave a gift of 25 DVDs of American movies to British PM Gordon Brown after Brown visited the White House. But it turns out the DVDs won't even work. "[W]hen the PM settled down to begin watching them the other night, he found there was a problem. ... The films only worked in DVD players made in North America and the words 'wrong region' came up on his screen."



GOOD NEWS

Last night, President Obama sent "a special message to the people and government of Iran" on Nowruz, the beginning of the Persian New Year. Obama said he seeks "engagement that is honest and grounded in mutual respect."

BLOG WATCH

THINK PROGRESS: After successfully protecting Wall St. bonuses, financial lobbyists turn focus to defeating President Obama's budget.

WONK ROOM: Will Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND) be the champion of health care reform?

YGLESIAS: CNBC's Larry Kudlow is worrying about inflation while Rome burns.

THE CABLE: Gens. David Petraeus and Ray Odierno are "frustrated" by GOP efforts to derail prospective Iraq ambassador Christopher Hill.

STATE WATCH

MASSACHUSETTS: For every job opening in the state, "there are nearly eight people who can't find full-time work."

MISSOURI: Lawmakers say state legislature's new budget cuts health care and social services for the under-insured.

FLORIDA: "The Florida Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously upheld a ban on gifts to legislators and requiring lobbyists reveal how much they make."

DAILY GRILL

"[H]mmm, maybe the president shouldn't go on [L]eno and...instead explain to me how those morons at AIG got bonuses."
-- Meghan McCain, 3/19/09

VERSUS

"I think that part of the calculation they were making was the way the contracts were written said, if you don't pay us immediately, then we can claim three times as much as we were owed under the bonuses."

-- President Obama, 3/19/09, discussing the AIG bonuses on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno

INTERNSHIPS

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