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The Anderson Files: Schumer, Manchin

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Aug. 4, 2022

Volume XXIX, number 47

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Schumer, Manchin and a green future

by Dave Anderson

Recently, UN Secretary General António Guterres warned that fossil-fuel driven climate chaos is ravaging the planet. He said, “We have a choice. Collective action or collective suicide … Greenhouse gas concentrations, sea level rise, and ocean heat have broken new records. Half of humanity is in the danger zone from oods, droughts, extreme storms, and wild res.” e climate movement has grown by leaps and bounds but the ght for a sustainable future is tough. e fossil fuel industry has a stranglehold on the Republican Party and has had considerable clout in the Democratic Party. However, Joe Biden’s Build Back Better (BBB) proposals had impressive environmental measures.

e “physical infrastructure” (roads and bridges) component of BBB would turn into a smaller bi-partisan bill that passed and became law. e “human infrastructure” bill was passed by the Democratic majority in the House but was killed in the Senate by 50 Republicans and two Democrats, Joe Manchin (West Virginia) and Kyrsten Sinema (Arizona). at bill was designed to improve conditions for families with universal pre-K and subsidized child care, paid family and medical leave, free community college and expanded tax credits. Other progressive bills died in the Senate after passing the House.

Nevertheless, the negotiations about a Democrats-only libuster-proof budget reconciliation package went on. is angered Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who threatened to sabotage CHIPS, a bipartisan bill to boost the U.S. semiconductor industry, which many Republicans supported. But then Joe Manchin announced that he was quitting the negotiations over BBB. He was done. Democrats were enraged. McConnell rejoiced and let the CHIPS bill pass.

A few hours later, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Manchin surprised everyone by saying they had a reconciliation deal which was more than 700 pages long. ey had been negotiating for many months. It’s called the In ation Reduction Act (IRA). e bill includes $369 billion for “energy security and climate change,” which is projected to reduce carbon emissions in the U.S. by 40%. Congressman Ro Khanna (D-CA.) said the agreement “will mark a historic direct investment in renewable energy and will unleash hundreds of billions of private investment for moonshot projects.” Khanna is a leading progressive Democrat who co-chaired Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidential campaign. e bill also includes a 15% corporate minimum tax on companies with pro ts of more than $1 billion a year. It would also continue expansions to the A ordable Care Act that passed during the pandemic though 2025 and allow Medicare to pursue lower drug costs by negotiating directly with drug companies. e U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the country’s leading business lobby, has pledged to oppose much of the bill.

It would signi cantly raise taxes on the rich and it would give the underfunded Internal Revenue Service its biggest budget increase in its history ($80 billion over 10 years).

“ is would certainly be the biggest corporate tax increase in decades,” said Steve Wamho , a tax expert at Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a liberal think tank. “We’ve had decades of tax policy bene ting the rich, but this is really the rst attempt to raise revenue in a progressive way that would begin to combat wealth and income inequality.”

National climate groups have criticized the bill for helping the fossil fuel industry. Manchin said it has “all of the above energy strategy.”

According to the Center for Biological Diversity:

“ e bill would require the Interior Department to o er at least 2 million acres of public lands and 60 million acres of o shore waters for oil and gas leasing each year for a decade as a prerequisite to installing any new solar or wind energy. If the department failed to o er these minimum amounts for leasing, no right of ways could be granted for any utility-scale renewable energy project on public lands or waters.” at’s bad. Manchin is a coal multimillionaire who has received the most money from the oil and gas industry of any senator in this current electoral cycle. He is a unique Democratic senator. Trump won 70% of the vote in West Virginia. e coal industry is dying and Trump promised to bring it back.

But Manchin acknowledges reality. An analysis of the bill by online environmental magazine Grist notes:

“ e bill invests in almost every kind of clean electricity generation imaginable, and o ers grants and loans to speed up the development of new transmission lines to carry that clean power to customers. Existing tax credits for wind and solar would be extended and made more accessible to tribes, municipal utilities, and rural cooperatives. ese energy projects would get more money for meeting wage minimums or for siting projects in ‘energy communities’—in other words, creating clean jobs in areas that have long been hubs for fossil fuel work.” is opinion column does not necessarily re ect the views of Boulder Weekly.

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