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Think Progress

June 23, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, Ryan Powers, and Nate Carlile

ENERGY

Clean Economy For 48 Cents/Day

Since Reps. Henry Waxman (D-CA) and Edward Markey (D-MA) introduced the American Clean Energy and Security Act (ACES), conservatives have grown increasingly hysterical in their opposition to clean energy and green jobs. Rep. "Smokey" Joe Barton (R-TX) -- a prominent global warming denier and top recipient of dirty coal funding -- renamed the bill. "They like to call it ACES but I call it C.R.A.P. -- continue ruining America's prosperity," he snickered. Rep. Frank Lucas (R-OK) declared that a cap-and-trade system like the one proposed by Waxman and Markey "promises to cap our incomes, our livelihoods, and our standard of living" and will therefore "hurt American agriculture." Though Republicans have long falsely claimed that a cap-and-trade program will cost every American family $3,000, a new analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found "that the net annual economywide cost of the cap-and-trade program in 2020 would be $22 billion -- or about $175 per household." This amounts to 48 cents per day -- a little more than the cost of a postage stamp. Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) and former Secretary of State Richard Armitage have argued recently that climate change is also "the biggest long term threat" to America's national security. Unwilling to wait any longer for much-needed action, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) announced Monday that she plans to bring ACES for a House vote on Friday. Center for American Progress (CAP) CEO John Podesta acknowledged that ACES is "imperfect in its means" but ultimately "deserves the support of progressives." Though the bill may not be everything environmentalists and progressives want, Podesta, alluding to the Rolling Stones's Mick Jagger, said, "They must try this time to pass it through the House so that we can ultimately get what we need: a clean energy law that creates jobs, reduces oil use, and cuts global warming pollution."

A POSTAGE STAMP A DAY:
For months, congressional Republicans have claimed that addressing climate change and transitioning to a clean energy economy would cost every American household thousands of dollars. As the Wonk Room's Brad Johnson argued in March, the claim "is a deliberate lie." "Conservatives that cite horrendous dollar figures are engaging in statistical demagoguery in an attempt scare enough representatives to defeat the American Clean Energy and Security Act," wrote CAP Director of Climate Strategy Daniel J. Weiss. The latest CBO analysis should end this once and for all. Indeed, the CBO found that, for "households in the lowest income quintile would see an average net benefit of about $40 in 2020." As Weiss points out, the analysis did not even include other aspects of the bill, like energy efficiency promotion, that would further mitigate costs. In fact, the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy "estimates that the efficiency provisions alone could save businesses and consumers $22 billion annually by 2020. The savings would be $170 per household in 2020 -- roughly equal to CBO's cost per household estimate for ACES in 2020," Weiss writes. 
 
1.7 MILLION NEW JOBS: The day before the CBO's new analysis was released, two complementary reports -- prepared by the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst (PERI), CAP, Green For All, and the Natural Resources Defense Council -- determined that addressing climate change would create millions of new jobs. The PERI/CAP report found that a $150 billion annual investment in clean energy over 10 years -- an investment supported by ACES and the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act -- could create a net increase of 1.7 million American jobs. The second study found that "clean-energy investments create more job opportunities than spending on fossil fuels, across all levels of skill and education. The largest benefits will accrue to workers with relatively low educational credentials." Investing in clean, renewable energy creates up to four times as many jobs as an equivalent investment in oil and natural gas. Most of these green jobs will be created by retrofitting buildings to make them more energy efficient and by building new clean-energy projects, like wind farms. "In other words, investing in clean energy means more work for machinists, truck drivers, builders, roofers, insulators, electricians, engineers, and dispatchers." Indeed, the addition of 1.7 million jobs this year would have translated into a full point drop in national unemployment, from 9.4 to 8.4 percent.

THE RIGHT WING RAMPS UP: As Congress inches closer to ushering in a clean energy economy that creates jobs, enhances national security and protects our planet, the far right is ramping up efforts to block the necessary legislation. The oil industry has spent $44.5 million on lobbying in the first three months of 2009 alone, and last year spent 73 percent more on lobbying than it did the year before. In fact, last week a Republican group circulated a document attacking ACES as an economic burden. The Powerpoint document turned out to be drawn almost verbatim from documents by the coal lobby and Peabody Energy, the world's largest coal company. And conservatives are also using new web and TV ads to fearmonger. Yesterday, Newt Gingrich's group American Solutions for Winning the Future released a grainy, black-and-white ad comparing the national economy to the infamous wobbling Tacoma Narrows Bridge. The bridge collapses as the narrator warns about the effects of a "national energy tax." "We'll lose more jobs, pay more for gas and electricity -- pushing our economy to its breaking point," the narrator intones. An RNC ad declares that cap-and-trade legislation will make "power unaffordable for all of us." These are intellectually dishonest arguments. "The point is that we need to be clear about who are the realists and who are the fantasists here," New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote. "The realists are actually the climate activists, who understand that if you give people in a market economy the right incentives they will make big changes in their energy use and environmental impact. The fantasists are the burn-baby-burn crowd who hate the idea of using government for good, and therefore insist that doing the right thing is economically impossible."

UNDER THE RADAR

ECONOMY -- FINANCIAL INDUSTRY LOBBYISTS PUSH BACK AGAINST INCREASED OVERSIGHT AND GREATER TRANSPARENCY: In response to the Obama administration's ambitious "plan to modernize financial regulation and supervision," different sectors of the financial industry have begun a fierce effort to lobby against increased regulations. According to the New York Times, hedge funds have banded together to "fend off tougher oversight, higher taxes and much greater transparency." Over the last two years, hedge fund managers have spent nearly $15 million on lobbyists, four times the amount they spent in previous years. The Hill reports that "nine major financial and real estate lobbying associations" have joined forces in lobbying against changes in accounting rules for banks, including a rule that will require firms to move off-balance sheet assets onto their own balance sheets. The "financial lobby will push hard on regulators and Congress to delay the change," which would ban encouraging risky lending by banks, the practice that led to the financial crisis. Banks have also signaled their opposition to President Obama's latest proposal for a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which Obama claims will prevent "mortgage, credit card and other abuses that contributed to the current crisis." Despite opposition from the financial industry, President Obama remains firm in his call for "sweeping overhaul of the financial regulatory system...on a scale not seen since the reforms that followed the Great Depression."


THINK FAST

This week, President Obama and his allies are "launching a public relations blitz to bolster the case for health care reform," resulting in a "huge burst of health care cheerleading before Congress breaks for the July Fourth recess at the end of the week." White House aides remain hopeful that "that floor consideration in the Senate and House can be completed next month, as originally planned."

52 percent: The percentage of Americans who give President Obama "high marks for his response to the crisis in Iran," according to a new ABC News/Washington Post poll. Thirty-six percent disapprove of how he is handling the situation. When it comes to Obama's "handling of foreign affairs in general," 61 percent approve while 32 percent disapprove.

Iran's Guardian Council today "ruled out the possibility of nullifying the country's disputed presidential election that returned hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power, saying it could find no evidence of any 'major' irregularities." The council's spokesman said most of the irregularities occurred before the election, "which he suggested were outside the scope of the Guardian Council's authority."

After having been reported missing, South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford's (R) whereabouts have been determined. His staff said late Monday that the governor is hiking on the Appalachian Trail. Neither Sanford's office nor the State Law Enforcement Division had been able to reach Sanford since he left the governor's mansion Thursday in a black Suburban SUV. His last known location was near Atlanta late last week.

At 12:30 PM today, President Obama will hold his fourth domestic press conference "as he seeks to re-focus the political debate amid criticism of his approach to the ongoing protests in Iran and lingering doubts about the state of he economy and the viability of his health care reform proposal." A senior White House official told The Washington Post that Obama wants to "address the questions directly."

Senate Republicans announced yesterday that they will "begin formally making their case against the nomination of Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court...with a series of [floor] speeches questioning her involvement in a Puerto Rican civil rights group and her positions on a number of legal issues."

A new report from the Government Accountability Office has found that "[w]hen people on the government's terrorist watch list have tried to buy guns or explosives in recent years, the government has let them the vast majority of the time." Ninety percent of the 963 background checks that matched with terrorist watch list records were allowed to proceed "because the checks revealed no prohibiting information."

Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad called yesterday "for the establishment of a Palestinian state within two years, a timeline he said is possible if Israel upholds its existing commitments and Palestinians 'roll up their sleeves.'" "I call upon you all to line up on the project of state-building, good government and proper management so the Palestinian state can be a reality," said Fayyad.

Census officials have said that married same-sex couples will be counted as such in the 2010 national tally, "reversing an earlier decision made under the Bush administration." Professor Gary Gates explains the important and valuable ramifications this decision will have.

And finally: On Friday, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow "gained valuable self-knowledge" while tending bar at the after-party of the annual Radio and Television Correspondents' Association Dinner. When asked what she learned from the night, Maddow replied, "I am the slowest, clumsiest bartenders known to mankind. Josey Packard [of Drink in Boston] and the other real bartenders I was working alongside were very nice to me, but it was like they were a NASCAR pit crew and I'd never seen a wrench before." ThinkProgress attended the event and captured a picture of Maddow bartending here.



BLOG WATCH

Losing the Latino vote wasn't for lack of trying.

Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) cites an inaccurate Powerline blog post to claim public health insurance isn't popular.

Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO) complains that banks provide "too much information" to their customers.

Tom Ricks issues a correction: Those using the crisis in Iran to hit Obama are not "clowns"; they are "dangerous clowns."

Michael Tomaksy says it's time to bang some heads together.

How can you be "a man of culture" if all your books are hidden away on the hard drive of a Kindle?

Obama Derangement Syndrome watch.

The American Right responds to the Iranian crisis.

DAILY GRILL

"Where to begin? 'Supreme Leader'? Note the abject solicitousness with which the American president confers this honorific on a clerical dictator."
-- Columnist Charles Krauthammer, 6/19/09, criticizing President Obama for referring to Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as the "Supreme Leader"

VERSUS

"There's no way [Obama is] going to sweet talk, you know, the Supreme Leader out of his nukes."
-- Krauthammer, 6/22/09


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