What's Really Behind the Koch Attacks on Democrats
Hint: it's not about healthcare
The
pushback from Democrats thus far has consisted mostly of efforts to
debunk the lies spread by the Koch TV spots on Obamacare—pointing out,
for example, that the Michigan woman who claimed it has made her
leukemia treatments “unaffordable” will in fact save at least $1,200 a
year under her new plan. The
Kochs’ election strategy is a sort of bait-and-switch, since their
stake in public policy is, in fact, only tangentially related to
healthcare. Anti-Obamacare messaging is part of a larger campaign
against government regulation that threatens the Kochs’ bottom line—most
critically, in response to climate change. “We have a broader cautionary tale,” Tim Phillips, the president of AFP, told The New York Times.
“The president’s out there touting billions of dollars on climate
change. We want Americans to think about what they promised with the
last social welfare boondoggle and look at what the actual result is.”
The
Kochs’ investments in fossil fuel include petrochemical complexes and
thousands of miles of pipeline and refineries in Alaska, Minnesota, and
Texas, an empire that emits over 24 million tons of carbon pollution
every year, about as much as 5 million cars. Thanks to a recent
investigation by the International Forum on Globalization, we now have
confirmation of what was long suspected: the Kochs are one of the
biggest investors in Alberta’s tar sands, with a Koch subsidiary holding
leases on 1.1 million acres of land in the region, giving them a major
stake in the approval of the Keystone XL pipeline—despite their
insistence otherwise.
To protect their interests, the Kochs have long sought to discredit science and government. In
Congress, more than a third of the House and a quarter of the Senate
have signed a Koch-backed “no climate tax” pledge, promising to vote
against any spending to fight climate change unless it’s offset by an
equal amount of tax cuts. When Republicans took over the
House in 2010, seventy-six of the eighty-five freshmen had signed the
pledge; fifty-seven had received campaign contributions from
Koch-affiliated groups. Since then, the House has voted to bar the
Environmental Protection Agency from regulating greenhouse gas emissions
and has repeatedly cut its budget. If the GOP retakes the Senate this
year, the party will be even more indebted to the Kochs.
Environmental
groups plan to provide cover for candidates under fire who favor “clean
energy and clean air policies.” But many Koch-targeted Democratic
senators—including Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, Mark Begich of Alaska,
Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Mark Warner of Virginia—support the Keystone
XL pipeline and some have opposed the EPA’s attempts to regulate carbon
pollution. President
Obama talks seriously about climate change, and his EPA has made some
good moves, but he’s also hailed the domestic oil and gas boom as if
“energy independence” could justify climate destruction. The answer to
our planet’s predicament, at least for now, is not going to come from
the Democratic Party. Nevertheless, it is crucial for the climate
movement to expose the efforts of the Kochs and the other fossil fuel
giants to hijack the democratic process for their own dirty ends.
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