September 6 2019, 9:03 a.m.
THE PROGRESSIVE POLICY Institute,
a centrist Democratic think tank that grew out of the party’s pro-business wing
in the 1980s and ’90s, received $50,000 from Exxon Mobil in 2018 via its parent
organization, the Third Way Foundation, according to the oil giant’s 2018
Worldwide Giving Report.
Exxon Mobil did not return The
Intercept’s multiple requests for comment. In an email, PPI Executive Director
Lindsay Lewis said the money was used for general support and that “we only
accept general support funding from corporate interests, we do not do paid for
work/research or have any donor run programs.”
Lewis also confirmed that this
is the first time Exxon Mobil has donated to the Third Way Foundation.
Though it’s a first, PPI’s new
donor isn’t so dramatic a shift from its fundraising record. The Intercept’s
Akela Lacy has also found that
PhRMA — the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America — has annually
donated between $25,000 and $75,000 to the Third Way Foundation since 2009,
upping its donation to $265,000 in 2016 — the same year that Medicare for All,
which the trade group and PPI both oppose, entered the national spotlight.
Donations dipped back to normal levels in 2017, although documents were not yet
available for 2018 when the piece was published in late April.
In the last couple years,
Exxon has taken up softer messaging on climate than either the Koch brothers or
the Mercer family. With business all over the world, Exxon — like every other
multinational oil company — is well-accustomed to operating in environments
where denying the reality of the climate emergency outright is
politically unthinkable. As climate concerns spike around the U.S., the
company is still plenty opposed to environmental regulations and the lawsuits
being lobbed its way from climate-vulnerable communities and attorneys general,
who are each calling into question Exxon’s rule in fueling both the climate
crisis and misinformation campaigns about it. Rather than paying people to say
that there’s no problem at all, it can rebrand as a good-faith actor in the
climate fight with paeans to carbon capture technology, low-carbon fuels
(algae!), and carbon taxes that also conveniently exempt it from some of the
lawsuits and regulations it’s most worried about. The decades of climate denial
Exxon helped fund — and now the Trump administration — have dragged the
national debate on climate change so far into the gutter that there are
influential liberals willing to give the company credit simply for not denying
the science.
This all dovetails well with a
centrist approach to climate politics that’s long sought common ground with
industry and harbors both temperamental and ideological opposition to big,
confrontational proposals like the Green New Deal. The upshot is that they’ve
started to sound a lot alike. Carbon capture, R&D, and carbon pricing —
while not mutually exclusive with the Green New Deal framework that the Sunrise
Movement, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and others have begun to flesh out —
have reliably been wielded as a cudgel by establishment types against calls for
more sweeping action.
Kert Davies, founder and
director of the Climate
Investigations Center, noted that the report indicates the money PPI
received was through a “corporate” grant, rather than through the ExxonMobil
Foundation. “We have never sussed how these two black boxes of money are
managed or dolled out. So if you grab the ExxonMobil Foundation 990s, there are
sometimes different descriptions or breakdowns of the funding, but this grant
won’t be there,” he wrote in an email. “There is no need for public accounting
of such grants. No obligation. But they have seemed compelled to disclosed them
through the years.”
Of course, $50,000 is not an
enormous amount of money either for PPI or Exxon Mobil. But it may well signal
a shift in the fossil fuel industry’s relationship to climate politics.
For years, Exxon Mobil
prolifically funded climate denier groups like the Heartland Institute and
Competitive Enterprise Institute. Under pressure, the company pledged to
stop funding deniers in 2007, although it kept
bankrolling politicians who deny the reality of the climate crisis.
Exxon also still support right-wing think tanks like the Manhattan Institute,
which received $970,200 from Exxon between 2008 and 2018. As recently as 2011,
MI Senior Fellow Robert Bryce said “the
science is not settled” on climate change. Another MI Senior Fellow,
Oren Cass, last year — the year after three of the five most expensive
hurricanes to have ever hit the Atlantic — authored a report arguing
that the potential costs of climate change are overblown, suggesting that many
people prefer
warmer temperatures and could adapt easily to global warming. In
addition to Exxon, MI is — like other flagrant denier groups — funded by the
Mercer Family Foundation; Rebekah Mercer, a key financier of Donald Trump’s
2016 campaign, runs the foundation and sits on the MI board. Exxon also
continues to give large donations the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and remains a
member of the American Petroleum Institute, each of which has fought hard
against environmental regulations and climate measures. The oil company only
left the Koch-funded American Legislative Exchange Council in 2017, four years
after it pushed model
legislation in Oklahoma, Colorado, and Arizona that described global
warming as a “theory.”
Itai Vardi reported at DeSmog this
summer that Phil Goldberg, director of PPI’s Center for Civil Justice, has come
out swinging against climate lawsuits being brought by cities and states
against fossil fuel companies. The law firm at which Goldberg is a partner —
Shook, Hardy & Bacon — defended the tobacco industry for
decades and was the inspiration for
the fictional firm Smoot, Hawking in the 2005 film “Thank You For Smoking.” As
a slew of lawsuits has begun to call into question fossil fuel companies’ role
in fueling and spreading misinformation about the climate crisis, the industry
has stepped into high gear to fight off litigation.
Goldberg is a former lobbyist
for the coal company Peabody Energy who was brought
on as special counsel by the National Association of Manufacturers in
January as part of its Manufacturers Accountability Project, founded in 2017 to
take on “activist litigation” against big oil companies; Exxon Mobil is a NAM
member, and the MAP project has been among the most active bodies fighting off
climate-related legal action. Both Peabody and NAM have also donated generously
to climate denial groups over the years. Both, for instance, were members of
the now-defunct Global
Climate Coalition, which through the 1990s sought to undermine U.N. climate
negotiations and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Goldberg has
also been an adviser for
ALEC’s Civil Justice Task Force. In addition to the model legislation on global
warming, ALEC has vigorously opposed climate and clean energy legislation
around the country.
Lewis said that Goldberg works
with PPI in a volunteer capacity and is not employed by the Third Way
Foundation, despite his lofty title. Evidently, he’s vocally defending fossil
fuel companies out of the goodness of his heart.
In March, Goldberg co-authored
a report for
the industry front group Grow America’s Infrastructure Now on how to bring
legal action against anti-pipeline organizers. “Allowing vigilante regulation
to go unchecked undermines our democracy. We honor civil protests in this
country, but we should not have to accept improper efforts to overturn the rule
of law,” Goldberg said in a press release. “People who violate the law by
improperly interfering with legitimate business activities, even to advance a
political or public policy preference, can be held accountable for their
actions through civil litigation.” While not disclosed on the group’s website,
GAIN spokesperson Craig
Stevens is a partner at the DCI Group, which specializes in astroturf
campaigns that have fought everything from anti-smoking laws to climate
legislation. From 2005 through 2016, Exxon Mobil was a DCI client. In another
detail not mentioned on the GAIN site, the group’s strategic adviser is James
“Spider” Marks, who as of 2017 was the advisory board chair of the security
firm TigerSwan, which — as The Intercept has documented extensively
— engaged in “military-style counterterrorism measures” against anti-pipeline
protesters.
Asked whether Goldberg’s
positions on climate litigation were also PPI’s, Lewis replied, “PPI, which has
long advocated for cap and trade, a carbon tax, and other polices to combat
climate change, believes such policies should be made in representative
legislatures, not the courts.” In short, yes.
Throughout the 2020 campaign
cycle, PPI strategic adviser and Clinton White House insider Paul Bledsoe has
commented frequently about the dangers of candidates being too hard on fossil
fuels. “[Joe] Biden and other moderate candidates must emphasize that the
market is already phasing out coal over time, but that their climate policies
still allow a role for natural gas as a low-carbon transition fuel for some
time,” he told the Washington
Examiner in August. “This distinction is crucial to success in swing
states like Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan.” In a New
York Times piece about Biden’s critics on the left, Bledsoe said,
“Indulging in ideological purity is great until you actually want to solve the
problem.”
“Happily,” he wrote in a
February Forbes op-ed
attacking the Green New Deal, “there is no need to eliminate fossil fuels in
the next decade or require only renewable energy or guarantee public sector
jobs to meet our climate goals.” We might never find out what Exxon Mobil’s
money got up to at PPI last year. If its experts keep sounding like Bledsoe and
Goldberg, though, it’ll probably keep coming.
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