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ENVIRONMENT

Green New Deal Opponents Score 24 Times More Campaign Cash From Big Oil Companies

The donations highlight the existential stakes for the fossil fuel industry in the debate over the Green New Deal.

(Maplight) The average congressional opponent of the Green New Deal has received 24 times more campaign cash from the nation’s largest oil and gas companies than sponsors of the climate change resolution, according to a MapLight analysis.

The resolution, introduced on Feb. 7 by Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., urges lawmakers to begin outlining the best options for reshaping the nation’s $20.7 trillion economy to mitigate climate change. Scientists believe humans have fewer than a dozen years to limit the production of greenhouse gases or to begin facing droughts, floods, extreme heat waves, and economic misery for millions of people.

The 90 House sponsors have received a total of $37,175 in campaign donations — an average of $413 each — from the 10 largest publicly traded U.S. oil and gas companies since 2017. Meanwhile, the 344 opponents of the resolution cumulatively received 91 times more money. The opponents, who include all 197 House Republicans and 145 Democrats, took almost $3.4 million from the energy companies, an average of $9,876per lawmaker.

The donations highlight the existential stakes for the fossil fuel industry in the debate over the Green New Deal. One of the centerpieces of the broad measure calls upon Congress to curb the effects of climate change by creating a plan for a net carbon-neutral economy within the next decade.

The 10 companies, which have a combined market capitalization topping $900 billion, and their employees have given money to 235 current House members since 2017, with GOP members opposing the Green New Deal accounting for two-thirds of the recipients. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., received the most of any lawmaker, reporting $90,350 in contributions from the energy giants. Nine of the 10 biggest recipients of campaign money from the oil and gas companies are Republicans.

ExxonMobil, the Irving, Texas-based descendant of the Standard Oil Co. that’s become the largest publicly traded energy company in the world, gave the most donations of any oil and gas company, contributing more than $848,000 to House members since 2017. Only $8,400 — less than 1 percent — of the ExxonMobil contributions went to Green New Deal sponsors.

The House hasn’t voted on the resolution yet, although Republican lawmakers are pushing for a vote in hopes of embarrassing the Democratic majority by painting the resolution as a job-killing exercise in Stalinesque socialism that will make hamburgers and pickup trucks illegal. Despite the Republican attacks, a February Wall Street Journal poll found almost two-thirds of American adults believe the GOP’s position on climate change is outside the mainstream.

A similar tactic last week by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., resulted in a 57-0 vote against the resolution. Three Democrats and Sen. Angus King, I-Me., voted with the Senate’s 53 Republicans. The remaining Democrats voted “present” to avoid highlighting differences within the party over the proposal, including six current senators who are running for the Democratic nomination for president and who are cosponsoring the resolution.

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Citizen Truth republishes articles with permission from a variety of news sites, advocacy organizations and watchdog groups. We choose articles we think will be informative and of interest to our readers. Chosen articles sometimes contain a mixture of opinion and news, any such opinions are those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Citizen Truth.

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2 Comments

  1. Kurt April 3, 2019

    Is this the transparency that we were promised. Its shockingly obvious that the need for clean water and air and the will of the American people mean absolutely nothing to the prostitute politicians in our federal government.
    We really can’t call them public servants now. Can we? Our planet is losing its ability to support life. Mostly because of the greed and recklessness of the energy companies. Yet who does the most corrupt federal government on Earth cater to, them.
    This is a indictment of the federal government that can’t be ignored.
    All that matters to these charlatans is money
    money, and more money. Never mind that in a few years we will suffocate from lack of oxygen in the air we breathe.
    Money is poison to the Democratic system.
    We need to outlaw the stuff.
    Eventually the planet will be Communist.
    Not because the Communists are so self promoting, but because the Capitalists leave us no choise.

    Reply
  2. Lauren von Bernuth April 5, 2019

    I agree money in politics is a hugeee part of the problem, if not the entire problem. Check out Represent.us they have been passing some anti-corruption laws around the country to limit lobbying influence plus I’m hopeful ranked choice voting can help eliminate money too.

    Reply

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