The Senate’s top Democrat, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, is throwing his weight behind an economic message that ties climate to goals around racial justice, income inequality, labor rights and a lot more.
Why it matters: The broad resolution which includes calls for investments in low-carbon energy and infrastructure previews Democrats’ political posture if they regain the majority and have a chance to legislate.
Driving the news: Schumer is co-sponsoring the new resolution that’s a call to “Transform, Heal, and Renew by Investing in a Vibrant Economy,” or THRIVE.
- Schumer, at the resolution’s rollout event, said the U.S. is experiencing a “collision of crises” the pandemic, the economic crisis, climate change and racial injustices.
- “We can’t play whack-a-mole with these crises, we can’t pick one alone to focus on,” Schumer said.
- The bicameral plan has over 80 co-sponsors, and backers include the Sierra Club, the Movement for Black Lives, and the Service Employees International Union.
Between the lines: Like the Green New Deal, the new House and Senate resolution is a big and vague thing that tells us little about policy specifics, but plenty about the politics of the moment.
- It reflects the increasing efforts among progressives to link climate and environmental policy to battling systemic racism and inequalities including the disproportionate pollution burdens facing people of color.
- There’s plenty there for organized labor too. One section endorses the union-backed “Protecting the Right to Organize Act” and other steps to expand labor power.
- But, it remains to be seen how much this very intersectional framing of their climate message might affect chances of moving big policies if a political window opens, and how it might translate into more detailed legislation.
Quick take: It’s the latest example that Democrats understand big new steps on climate would probably need to hitch a ride with other priorities.
- As we wrote here, Joe Biden has tethered his proposal for $2 trillion in climate-related investments to his wider economic recovery plan.
- Or go back a decade, when Democrats frequently argued that the big climate bill they tried to move through Congress would help ease dependence on oil imports.