Mar. 27, 2019 06:57AM ESTP
The Green New
Deal ― an ambitious 10-year plan to transition the U.S. away
from fossil
fuels while promoting green jobs and greater equality ― failed to
advance in the Senate Tuesday after most Democrats voted "present" in
an attempt to forestall a Republican ploy to exploit disagreements within the
party.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had been clear about
his intention to put the resolution to an up or down vote in an attempt to
force Democrats to support or oppose the controversial measure ahead of the
2020 election, CNN reported. Climate activists and the proposal's House
co-sponsor and leading champion Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez had given Senate Democrats the greenlight to vote
"present" in an attempt to slight McConnell, Vox reported. Ocasio-Cortez said McConnell's manipulations
suggested Republicans were not taking climate change seriously.
"The Senate vote is a perfect example of that kind of
superficial approach to government," Ocasio-Cortez said Tuesday, according
to Vox. "What McConnell's doing is that he's trying to rush this bill to
the floor without a hearing, without any markups, without working through
committee — because he doesn't want to save our planet. Because he thinks we
can drink oil in 30 years when all our water is poisoned."
The measure was defeated 57-0, The Guardian reported, meaning it failed to get the 60
votes necessary to advance to a final vote, the Huffington Post pointed out. Three Democrats and one
Independent, Maine Senator Angus King, joined with all 53 Republicans in voting
"no."
The Democrats who broke ranks to vote against the measure
all come from conservative-leaning states. They were Joe Manchin of West
Virginia, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Doug Jones of Alabama.
Manchin said that he wanted to focus on "real
solutions that recognized the role fossil fuels will continue to play,"
according to a statement reported by CNN.
"We cannot successfully address our climate challenge
by eliminating sources of energy that countries are committed to using,"
he said.
Manchin is notoriously pro-coal and has received almost $1 million
in campaign contributions from the fossil fuel industry over the course of his
career. In total, the senators who voted "no" Tuesday have received
more than $55,000,000 in contributions from fossil fuel companies, Oil Change United States reported.
While the Green New Deal isn't advancing right now, its
first Senate sponsor Massachusetts Democrat Ed Markey said it had done a good
job of sparking a national debate about climate change.
"This resolution has struck a powerful chord with the
American people," Markey said at a Monday press conference reported by the
Huffington Post. "The Green New Deal was always designed to be an opening
of a national discussion. And it has worked. In just six short weeks, everyone
is debating a Green New Deal. There's been more debate about climate change in
the last six weeks than in the last six years."
Every senator running for president in the 2020 Democratic
primary has co-sponsored the measure, among them California's Kamala Harris,
Massachusetts' Elizabeth Warren, Vermont's Independent Bernie Sanders, New
Jersey's Cory Booker, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Minnesota's Amy
Klobuchar.
While the Sunrise Movement, the grassroots group that has worked to
popularize the deal, endorsed the strategy of voting "present," they
will now continue to pressure Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to
co-sponsor the measure.
"We particularly want Sen. Schumer to continue to make
climate change central to his agenda and come through and back the Green New
Deal," Sunrise Movement spokesperson Stephen O'Hanlon said, as Vox
reported.
Meanwhile, during a House financial services committee
hearing, Ocasio-Cortez continued her outspoken advocacy for environmental
action, reacting strongly against the idea that it was an elitist concern. A
video of her speech had been shared thousands of times by Tuesday night, The
Guardian reported.
"This is about our lives, and this should not be
partisan," she said in the clip. "Science should not be
partisan."
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