Current:Home > reviewsCongress Launches Legislative Assault on Obama Administration’s Clean Power Plan -GrowthProspect
Congress Launches Legislative Assault on Obama Administration’s Clean Power Plan
View
Date:2025-04-18 18:25:50
Republican legislators in the House and Senate have introduced resolutions that aim to dismantle the Obama administration’s recently finalized carbon pollution rules.
Led by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, lawmakers in the Senate introduced a resolution on Tuesday to block the Clean Power Plan under the Congressional Review Act. Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.) introduced a House version of the bill on Monday. Whitfield and McConnell also introduced resolutions to preempt a recently proposed rule to cut carbon emissions from new power plants.
The Clean Power Plan, which requires states to cut carbon emissions by 32 percent by 2030 from existing power plants, has faced attacks on multiple fronts since it was proposed in 2014. The final rule was announced in August.
The publication of the rule in the federal register last week made it official, opening it up to fresh lawsuits and legislative opposition. So far, 26 states as well as a number of business groups and coal companies have filed lawsuits. They contend that the Clean Power Plan is an example of federal overreach and an onerous burden on industries that will cost jobs and hurt the economy.
This latest attempt to use the Congressional Review Act (CRA) would not get past a veto by President Obama. The resolutions are widely seen as symbolic, meant to show congressional opposition to the carbon regulations ahead of the international climate treaty negotiations in Paris later this year.
The Clean Power Plan is the centerpiece of the Obama administration’s climate policy agenda, which the White House believes is critical in garnering international support for the Paris talks. Fierce opposition could shake the international community’s confidence that the U.S. will follow through on its climate commitments.
The Congressional Review Act gives Congress the authority to review major regulations. Congress has introduced CRA resolutions 43 times since its inception in 1996. Of them, only one passed both chambers, was not vetoed by the president and succeeded in overturning a rule.
The Sierra Club’s legislative director, Melinda Pierce, called the CRA resolutions a “futile political ploy.”
“We expected the coal industry to throw the kitchen sink at the Clean Power Plan, but it’s still appalling that they would threaten these essential protections using this extreme maneuver,” Pierce said in a statement.
Republican leaders, particularly those from the Appalachian region, have said the Obama administration is waging a war on coal and the Environmental Protection Agency’s rules are overly punitive on the coal industry. Coal, however, has been in a steady decline since 2000 as easily accessible coal supplies have diminished and cheap natural gas has flooded the market.
A recent poll also found that a majority of Americans, including Republicans, are supportive of the Clean Power Plan and want to see their states implement it. That shift is in line with other polling showing that concern about climate change is at a peak, with 56 percent of Republicans saying there is solid evidence that climate change is real.
In Kentucky, McConnell and Whitfield’s home state, the attorney general is suing the EPA over the Clean Power Plan. But local grassroots groups, including Kentuckians For The Commonwealth and KY Student Environmental Coalition, have led rallies calling on state leaders to comply with the rules and launched a program to help stakeholders create a plan to meet the state’s carbon targets.
“In essence this plan would create so many new jobs here in eastern Kentucky. Jobs we desperately need,” Stanley Sturgill, a retired coal miner and member of Kentuckians For The Commonwealth, said in an email. “Sadly, the very politicians…that are supposed to represent our own good health and well being are the ones that are our biggest opposition for this Clean Power Plan.”
veryGood! (778)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Halsey releases new single 'The End' detailing secret health battle: 'I'm lucky to be alive'
- Maryland agencies must submit a plan to help fight climate change, governor says
- Big GOP funders sending millions into Missouri’s attorney general primary
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Levi Wright, 3-year-old son of rodeo star Spencer Wright, taken off life support 2 weeks after toy tractor accident
- Review: 'Bad Boys' Will Smith, Martin Lawrence are still 'Ride or Die' in rousing new film
- 10 Cent Beer Night: 50 years ago, Cleveland's ill-fated MLB promotion ended in a riot
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- North Carolina state senator drops effort to restrict access to autopsy reports
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Ex-husband of ‘Real Housewives’ star convicted of hiring mobster to assault her boyfriend
- 12-year-old boy accidentally shoots cousin with gun, charged with homicide: Reports
- 83-year-old Alabama man mauled to death by neighbor's dogs, reports say
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Columbia University and a Jewish student agree on a settlement that imposes more safety measures
- Tech news site Gizmodo sold for third time in 8 years as European publisher Keleops looks to expand
- Kansas leaders and new group ramp up efforts to lure the Kansas City Chiefs from Missouri
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Lionel Messi debuts new drink Mas+: How to get Messi's new drink online and in stores
Former protege sues The-Dream, accusing the hitmaking music producer of sexual assault
Psychedelic drug MDMA faces FDA panel in bid to become first-of-a-kind PTSD medication
Travis Hunter, the 2
Woman initially pronounced dead, but found alive at Nebraska funeral home has passed away
Christian McCaffrey signs 2-year extension with 49ers after award-winning 2023 campaign
Three boys discovered teenage T. rex fossil in northern US: 'Incredible dinosaur discovery'