by Rona Fried
Lie, Smear, Obstruct, Win. That's the new motto for American politics.
Add to that pompous ignorance and you know what we're up against in the 2011 Congress. After eight long years of the Bush Administration, we had a very brief period of support for cleantech and renewable energy with the Obama Administration. Now, that "hope for change" is gone.
It's bad news for science and the reality of climate change with climate deniers back in town. Bill Mayer joked on Real Time that Tea Partiers don't "believe" in gravity. But it's no joke.
We're about to have the most pro-dirty energy Congress we've seen. Thanks to the Citizens United Supreme Court decision, Big Oil and Dirty Coal spent a fortune to swing this election, and they got what they paid for.
Renewable energy, clean technology, and the vital investments in education and research that underpin its spread are in jeopardy in the US. In fact, the new Republican majority will do their best to unwind all our environmental laws that protect our air and water and natural resources. Those laws put "undue burdens" on polluters - if we want jobs, we'll have to get rid of them.
NRDC says: Powerful members of the new majority have signaled their intent to unshackle polluters from the Clean Air Act ... strip wolves of their endangered species protection ... industrialize the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge . . . slash budgets for clean energy programs ... and hold hearings questioning the science behind global warming.
Remember Joe Barton (R-TX)? He's the one that apologized to BP because the Obama Administration was charging them the full price for the Gulf oil spill. Well, he'll probably chair the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
These people don't compromise. Their only goal is to hoist President Obama from office and regain power in the Senate. They have no policy solutions to the multitude of problems our nation faces.
Their idea of an energy policy is oil drilling (watch out ANWR), clean coal, nuclear and natural gas, even as polling shows that 90% of Americans want more clean energy and 80% want higher gas mileage for cars (yes, they want to gut that too), as well as comprehensive efforts to protect our air and water. Most representatives who supported the House clean energy bill won their races.
Is there any Good News?
Nearly every Republican candidate for Senate rejects the sound, settled science that man-made carbon pollution is causing the Earth's climate to change. Fortunately, voters rejected ‘flat earthers' like Carly Fiorina, Christine O'Donnell, Sharron Angle and Ken Buck, choosing instead to return to Washington clean energy champions like Barbara Boxer, Harry Reid and Michael Bennet. Although we lost key environmental leaders like Senator Russ Feingold, voters elected new clean energy leaders to the Senate, such as Richard Blumenthal and Chris Coons.