the
fight over the Keystone XL pipeline that will bring some of the
dirtiest energy on the planet from Alberta, Canada, to the U.S. Gulf
Coast the “Selma and Stonewall” of the climate movement.
Which, if
you think about it, may be both good news and bad news. Yes, those of
us fighting the pipeline have mobilized record numbers of activists: the
largest civil disobedience action
and 40,000 people on the mall in February for the biggest climate rally in American history. Right now, we’re aiming to get
about
the “environmental review” the State Department is conducting on the
feasibility and advisability of building the pipeline. And there’s good
reason to put pressure on. After all, it’s the same State Department
that, as on a previous round of reviews,
“experts” who had once worked as consultants for TransCanada, the pipeline’s builder.
Still,
let’s put things in perspective: Stonewall took place in 1969, and as
of last week the Supreme Court was still trying to decide if gay people
should be allowed to marry each other. If the climate movement takes
that long, we’ll be rallying in scuba masks. (I’m not kidding. The
section of the Washington Mall where we rallied against the pipeline
this winter already has a big construction project underway: a
It
was certainly joyful to see marriage equality being considered by our
top judicial body. In some ways, however, the most depressing spectacle
of the week was watching Democratic leaders decide that, in 2013, it
was finally safe to proclaim gay people actual human beings. In one
weekend,
Democratic senators Mark Warner of Virginia, Claire McCaskill of
Missouri, Tim Johnson of South Dakota, and Jay Rockefeller of West
Virginia figured out that they had “evolved” on the issue. And Bill
Clinton, the greatest weathervane who ever lived,
finally decided that
the Defense of Marriage Act he had signed into law, boasted about in
ads on Christian radio, and urged candidate John Kerry to defend as
constitutional in 2004, was, you know, wrong. He, too, had “evolved,”
once the polls made it clear that such an evolution was a safe bet.
Why
recite all this history? Because for me, the hardest part of the
Keystone pipeline fight has been figuring out what in the world to do
about the Democrats.
Fiddling While the Planet Burns
Let’s begin by stipulating that, taken as a whole, they’re better than the Republicans. About a year ago, in his
initial campaign ad of
the general election, Mitt Romney declared that his first act in office
would be to approve Keystone and that, if necessary, he would “
build it myself.”
(A charming image, it must be said). Every Republican in the Senate
voted on a nonbinding resolution to approve the pipeline — every single
one. In other words, their unity in subservience to the fossil fuel
industry is complete, and almost compelling. At the least, you know
exactly what you’re getting from them.
With the Democrats, not so
much. Seventeen of their Senate caucus — about a third — joined the GOP
in voting to approve Keystone XL. As the Washington insider website
Politico proclaimed in a
headline the next day, “Obama’s Achilles Heel on Climate: Senate Democrats.”
Which
actually may have been generous to the president. It’s not at all
clear that he wants to stop the Keystone pipeline (though he has the
power to do so himself, no matter what the Senate may want), or for that
matter do anything else very difficult when it comes to climate
change. His new secretary of state, John Kerry, issued a preliminary
environmental impact statement on the pipeline so fraught with errors
that it took scientists and policy wonks about 20 minutes to
shred its math.
Administration
insiders keep insisting, ominously enough, that the president doesn’t
think Keystone is a very big deal. Indeed, despite his amped-up
post-election rhetoric on climate change, he continues to insist on an
“all-of-the-above” energy policy which, as renowned climate scientist
James Hansen pointed out in his
valedictory shortly before retiring from NASA last week, simply can’t be squared with basic climate-change math.
All
these men and women have excuses for their climate conservatism. To
name just two: the oil industry has endless resources and they’re scared
about reelection losses. Such excuses are perfectly realistic and
pragmatic, as far as they go: if you can’t get re-elected, you can’t do
even marginal good and you certainly can’t block right-wing craziness.
But they also hide a deep affection for oil industry
money, which turns out to be an even better predictor of voting records than party affiliation.
Anyway, aren’t all those apologias wearing thin as Arctic sea ice
melts with
startling, planet-changing speed? It was bad enough to take four
decades simply to warm up to the idea of gay rights. Innumerable lives
were blighted in those in-between years, and given long-lasting official
unconcern about AIDS, innumerable lives were lost. At least, however,
inaction didn’t make the problem harder to solve: if the Supreme Court
decides gay people should be able to marry, then they’ll be able to
marry.
Unlike gay rights or similar issues of basic human justice
and fairness, climate change comes with a time limit. Go past a certain
point, and we may no longer be able to affect the outcome in ways that
will prevent long-term global catastrophe. We’re clearly nearing that
limit and so the essential cowardice of too many Democrats is becoming
an ever more fundamental problem that needs to be faced. We lack the
decades needed for their positions to “evolve” along with the polling
numbers. What we need, desperately, is for them to pitch in and help
lead the transition in public opinion and public policy.
Instead,
at best they insist on fiddling around the edges, while the planet
prepares to burn. The newly formed Organizing for Action, for instance —
an effort to turn Barack Obama’s fundraising list into a kind of
quasi-official MoveOn.org — has
taken up climate
change as one of its goals. Instead of joining with the actual movement
around the Keystone pipeline or turning to other central organizing
issues, however, it evidently plans to devote more energy to house
parties to put solar panels on people’s roofs. That’s great, but there’s
no way such a “movement” will profoundly alter the trajectory of
climate math, a task that instead requires deep structural reform of
exactly the kind that makes the administration and Congressional
“moderates” nervous.
Energy Independence: Last Century’s Worry
So
far, the Democrats are showing some willingness to face the issues that
matter only when it comes to coal. After a decade of concentrated
assault by activists led by the Sierra Club, the coal industry is now
badly weakened: plans for more than 100 new coal-fired power plants have
disappeared from anyone’s drawing board. So, post-election, the White
House finally seems willing to take on the industry at least in modest
ways, including possibly with new Environmental Protection Agency
regulations that could start closing down existing coal-fired plants
(though even that approach
now seems delayed).
Recently,
I had a long talk with an administration insider who kept telling me
that, for the next decade, we should focus all our energies on “killing
coal.” Why? Because it was politically feasible.
And indeed we
should, but climate-change science makes it clear that we need to put
the same sort of thought and creative energy into killing oil and
natural gas, too. I mean, the Arctic — from Greenland to its seas —
essentially melted last summer in a way
never before seen.
The frozen Arctic is like a large physical feature. It’s as if you woke
up one morning and your left arm was missing. You’d panic.
There
is, however, no panic in Washington. Instead, the administration and
Democratic moderates are reveling in new oil finds in North Dakota and
in the shale gas now flowing out of Appalachia, even though exploiting
both of these energy supplies is likely to lock us into more decades of
fossil fuel use. They’re pleased as punch that we’re getting nearer to
“energy independence.” Unfortunately, energy independence was last
century’s worry. It dates back to
the crises set off by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in the early 1970s, not long after… Stonewall.
So
what to do? The narrow window of opportunity that physics provides us
makes me doubt that a third party will offer a fast enough answer to
come to terms with our changing planet. The Green Party certainly
offered the soundest platform in our last elections, and in Germany and
Australia the Greens have been decisive
in nudging
coalition governments towards carbon commitments. But those are
parliamentary systems. Here, so far, national third parties have been
more likely to serve as spoilers than as wedges (though it’s been an
enlightening pleasure to engage with New York’s Working Families Party,
or the Progressives in Vermont). It’s not clear to me how that will
effectively lead to changes during the few years we’ve got left to deal
with carbon. Climate science enforces a certain brute realism. It makes
it harder to follow one’s heart.
Along with some way to make a
third party truly viable, we need a genuine movement for fundamental
governmental reform — not just a change in the Senate’s filibuster
rules, but publicly funded elections, an end to the idea that
corporations are citizens, and genuine constraints on revolving-door
lobbyists. These are crucial matters, and it is wonderful to see
broad new campaigns underway
around them. It’s entirely possible that there’s no way to do what
needs doing about climate change in this country without them. But even
their most optimistic proponents talk in terms of several election
cycles, when the scientists tell us
that we have no hope of holding the rise in the planetary temperature below two degrees unless global emissions peak by 2015.
Of
course, climate-change activists can and should continue to work to
make the Democrats better. At the moment, for instance, the 350.org
action fund is
organizing college
students for the Massachusetts primary later this month. One senatorial
candidate, Steven Lynch, voted to build the Keystone pipeline, and
that’s not okay. Maybe electing his opponent, Ed Markey, will send at
least a small signal. In fact, this strategy got considerably more
promising in the last few days when California hedge fund manager and
big-time Democratic donor Tom Steyer
announced that
he was not only going to go after Lynch, but any politician of any
party who didn’t take climate change seriously. “The goal here is not to
win. The goal here is to destroy these people,” he said, demonstrating
precisely the level of rhetoric (and spending) that might actually start
to shake things up.
It will take a while, though. According to press reports, Obama
explained to
the environmentalists at a fundraiser Steyer hosted that “the politics
of this are tough,” because “if your house is still underwater,” then
global warming is “probably not rising to your number one concern.”
By
underwater, he meant: worth less than the mortgage. At this rate,
however, it won’t be long before presidents who use that phrase actually
mean “underwater.” Obama closed his remarks by saying something that
perfectly summed up the problem of our moment. Dealing with climate
change, he said, is “going to take people in Washington who are willing
to speak truth to power, are willing to take some risks politically, are
willing to get a little bit out ahead of the curve — not two miles
ahead of the curve, but just a little bit ahead of it.”
That pretty much defines the Democrats: just a little bit ahead, not as bad as Bush, doing what we can.
And
so, as I turn this problem over and over in my head, I keep coming to
the same conclusion: we probably need to think, most of the time, about
how to change the country, not the Democrats. If we build a movement
strong enough to transform the national mood, then perhaps the trembling
leaders of the Democrats will eventually follow. I mean, “evolve.” At
which point we’ll get an end to things like the Keystone pipeline, and
maybe even a price on carbon. That seems to be the lesson of Stonewall
and of Selma. The movement is what matters; the Democrats are, at best,
the eventual vehicle for closing the deal.
The closest thing I’ve
got to a guru on American politics is my senator, Bernie Sanders. He
deals with the Democrat problem all the time. He’s an independent, but
he caucuses with them, which means he’s locked in the same weird dance
as the rest of us working for real change.
A few weeks ago, I gave
the keynote address at a global warming summit he convened in Vermont’s
state capital, and afterwards I confessed to him my perplexity. “I
can’t think of anything we can do except keep trying to build a big
movement,” I said. “A movement vast enough to scare or hearten the
weak-kneed.”
“There’s nothing else that’s ever going to do it,” he replied.
And so, down to work.
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