Greetings to all of the sustainability leaders in the Green Commons!
Note: This is a message about politics, which we generally try to avoid in our safe space--but in this case it’s directly tied to climate action so I feel good about sharing it. Feel free to let me know or check in with the BuildingGreen folks if you have concerns or questions about this.
I’m guessing that most, if not all of you are aware of the recent saga of Joe Biden’s (disastrous) debate performance, followed up by a weak interview with ABC News, and Biden’s repeated insistence that he won’t be pushed out of the presidential race.
I’m writing to you all today to offer up a potential advocacy action to try to help Biden decide to step aside and allow someone else to take up the candidacy for the democratic ticket. If that’s not interesting to you, you can stop reading now. However if it is interesting, here’s my pitch:
This idea started with a newsletter post by Bill McKibben on June 29th, entitled “Give Joe Some Room”. After reading that post, I realized that I, like Bill, actually felt oddly energized by the clarity that comes from watching Biden so clearly demonstrate that “He can no longer reliably summon people to action, appeal to their better angels, let them share a vision of a workable future”. My new found energy came from the prospect that if Biden were to step aside, a new democratic candidate might actually provide the critical inflection point that the presidential race needs right now. As complicated and possibly even far-fetched as it seems, the idea of a new, younger, more dynamic democratic candidate shifted my mood of despair and despondency to a glimmer of hope.
I’ve spoken with enough of you to know that many of you feel that a second Trump presidency would be an existential threat to all of the climate-related work that we all do. Given that, it seems to me that drastic times call for drastic measures, and right now, Trump has huge momentum to win the November presidential race, so something has to happen to “shake up the race”, and Biden’s debate performance and subsequent interview did not fill the bill.
So here’s my proposal, which actually came from Bill McKibben himself, because by sheer coincidence I had the opportunity to see him speak live just two days ago in Portland where he was already scheduled to appear for his new “Third Act” project (folks over 60, please take note). After his talk, I had the opportunity to ask Bill directly what actions we should be taking with regards to Biden, now that we had given him some space, and he said that people should write Biden directly, asking him to step down, and then send a copy of whatever they sent to Biden to each democratic member of their congressional delegation, to make sure that the delegation knew their constituent was hoping that they would weigh in on this question.
So I’ve now done that, and if you’re interested, you can read what I sent to Biden and my delegation here.
I’m now writing to you all to ask you to consider doing the same, and to do so this week if possible. There is a lot of news flying right now about both House and Senate democrats assembling groups to ask Biden to step aside, so letters from people like us, in multiple states (especially swing states!) could make a difference if they are sent soon.
I totally understand if some of you don’t want to do this for any number of reasons, but for any of you who, like me, want to start doing something to positively affect this presidential race, this is one idea.
If you want to chat with me about this, feel free to reach out to me directly at:
Clark Brockman
clark@brockmanclimatestrategies.com
971.227.1514
- The structure of the Act makes it tough to entirely eliminate.
Some IRA credits have a 10-year runway, ensuring that applications approved today can’t be rescinded by the next administration, said Dan Saccardi, program director of the company network at Ceres.- States are directly benefiting.
States from across the political spectrum are investing historic amounts of capital thanks, in large part, to the available funds from the IRA, according to the Clean Investment Monitor Database. In the past four quarters, Georgia and Tennessee each invested almost $8 billion.- Ongoing industry support makes radical tampering risky.
Shell CEO Wael Sawan spoke in favor of preserving the IRA in June, saying that the IRA “seems to be working in terms of attracting a significant amount of capital in different states, whether it’s a red or blue state.” Nine of the top 10 districts in the U.S. that received the highest levels of clean tech investment are currently represented by Republicans. (SB Note: This is my favorite stat!)- Congress would have to sign off. (SB Note: Also encouraging, since Congress can't seem to do anything, ever!)
Ultimately, the IRA’s funds are congressionally appropriated, meaning a Republican victory in the White House come November would still require a Republican-led Congress to formally repeal or limit funds. That seems a stretch given the Act’s broad effects.