The Candidate Who Did Not Want To Change Anything Could Become the Great American Climate President

Published in Information
(Denmark) on 12 September 2020
by Mathias Sindberg (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Benedicte Nielsen. Edited by Benedicte Nielsen.
Lincoln, Roosevelt, Johnson, Biden? During the primaries, Biden promised that nothing would "fundamentally" change. Since then, the world has spun faster than usual, the moderate candidate is campaigning on a historically ambitious climate plan, and it is feasible that he will be the next in the line of American presidents to transform society: the climate president.

Joe Biden's presidential campaign is a climate policy breakthrough. He has refused to accept donations from fossil fuel companies. A Biden supporter would argue that Biden has made an ideological choice. A more cynical assessment is that Biden has refused to accept dirty money because he can.

Biden is not a progressive politician. Throughout his 50 years in politics, he has rarely represented himself as being particularly visionary, particularly liberal or particularly concerned about the environment.

During the primaries, he was the most moderate of all Democratic candidates, and a return to the world as it looked before Donald Trump emerged as the backbone of his political program. In June 2019, in front of an assembly of wealthy Democratic donors, he even stated “nothing will change fundamentally” if he becomes president.

This summer, just over a year later, Bernie Sanders appeared on MSNBC and told the host, "You know what … Joe Biden may become the most progressive president since FDR."

At the time, Joe Biden had just unveiled the most liberal, socially revolutionary program a Democratic candidate has campaigned on in decades: trillions of dollars in funding for housing, jobs, welfare, better unemployment benefits and a higher minimum wage.

This is classic liberal politics when it comes to crisis management and distribution of wealth, spiced up with elements of economic nationalism that Trump campaigned on with such great success in 2016. If one did not know any better, one might call it democratic socialism.

More sensational, however, is Biden's $10.5 trillion climate plan with its goal to make the American energy network fossil free by 2035 and to make the entire United States carbon neutral by 2050.

“Scientifically, one can argue to set an even higher goal, but politically it is a very, very progressive plan. Never before has a candidate campaigned on a climate policy that is so ambitious, so comprehensive and so far-reaching,“ says researcher Peter Gleick, who co-founded the climate think tank Pacific Institute in 1987.*

The phrase "Green New Deal" does not appear in Biden's Plan for Clean Energy Revolution and Environmental Justice. Nevertheless, it reiterates the basic idea. Massive public investment needs to go hand in hand with green considerations. Biden will pump up the economy and the transition to go green by building sustainable homes and a new electric grid, expanding public transport and helping the auto industry to switch to electricity.

"We are facing an economy in crisis, but an incredible opportunity to not only rebuild what we had before, but to build better, stronger and more sustainably," Biden himself explained, referring to the COVID-19 crisis.

Biden's campaign slogan is Build Back Better.

Biden has probably not changed since last year, but circumstances have dramatically changed since. Incredibly, it seems likely that the candidate who promised not to change anything could end up as the climate president who kick-starts a great transformation in the United States.

The Climate Change Battle

The battle to become the next president of the United States is about more than polls and who can scare voters with either Trumpism or left-wing extremism.

Trump’s and Biden’s approaches to climate policy are fundamentally different, and if Biden wins he could become the global leader of the green transition.

Today, we discuss Biden's climate plan and next week we will talk about what four years under Trump have meant to the climate and environment.

Finally a Movement

The economic crisis is not the only thing that has opened up a window of opportunity for the climate fight in America, explains Gleick, who has followed the American climate debate for decades.

"In recent years, it seems that the acknowledgment that this is real, serious and requires drastic action has finally taken root in a significant part of the population and within the Democratic Party," he said.*

This is partly because the consequences of climate change are becoming more concrete and obvious. Right now, even as I write, for example, the sky above San Francisco glows orange following a series of violent forest fires. Some 2.5 million hectares [nearly 6.2 million acres] of forest have burned down, eight people have died, and the entire state of California has been in a state of emergency since Aug. 18.

"I feel the climate change on my own body," another Southern California based climate scientist Peter Kalmus explains via Skype. "You can see the flames, smell the smoke and feel the heat. It is impossible to ignore."*

Kalmus, a researcher at the University of California, primarily believes it is a generational issue. Some 80% of Americans under the age of 30 see climate change as a significant threat to humanity, and they are far more willing to change than are their parents.

“I believe it really took off two years ago. There was a new report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Greta Thunberg exploded, and the scientists started talking in a more alarming tone," he says. "In the United States, only a small, narrow circle of people cared about climate issues, people who otherwise always led a quiet life and were always overshadowed by other issues."

Finally, climate policy drilled down to the wider public. "Finally we had a movement," says Kalmus.

Becoming Mainstream in Express Time

Many feared that this movement would run out of steam following COVID-19. With 200,000 American deaths, the pandemic has emerged as the paramount subject, and a recent Pew Research Center poll showed that Americans viewed the climate as the 11th most important policy area in the election campaign.

Still, Gleick believes there is hope, not least because the climate agenda has been settled in the Democratic Party. A good example of this happened two weeks ago when the party’s green wing did something unprecedented in American politics. It beat a Kennedy in Massachusetts.

Ed Markey, 74, has been a member of Congress longer than Robert Kennedy's grandson Joe Kennedy III has been alive. Yet it was interpreted as the victory for the new and young over the old and established, as he won the primary election to become the party's candidate for the Senate in a very Democrat-minded district.

“It doesn’t matter how old you are. What counts is how old your ideas are," the party's 30-year-old rising star, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, said in one of Markey's campaign videos.

What’s more, Markey's most famous idea is no more than two years old: The Green New Deal. At the grassroots level of the Democratic Party, the idea arose to weave change and large public investment together as a green counterpart to the Roosevelt-era crisis response reforms from the 1930s, but it was Markey and Ocasio-Cortez who brought the final reform plan into Congress.

Key Points in Biden's Climate Plan

The key points in Biden’s climate plan include the following:

• $10.5 trillion in green public investments over 10 years;
• A fossil-free energy network by 2035;
• The United States must be carbon-neutral by 2050;
• Fossil-free public transport and bike lanes in all cities with more than 100,000 inhabitants;
• Extensive energy renovations of homes and public buildings;
• 1 million new jobs in the auto industry related to incentives to invest in electric cars;
• All new infrastructure projects must help reduce emissions; and
• "Vulnerable groups" must benefit from at least 40% of the "gains" from public investments.

Markey's win “sent a resounding message: the politics of climate have changed, and embracing bold climate action is a winning message in tough races,” according to John Podesta, who served as former chief of staff to Bill Clinton and chief adviser to Barack Obama.

Biden's climate plan is not the Green New Deal. Liberal economical elements in Cortez and Markey’s original plan have been removed, such as a nationwide job guarantee.

Finally, a broad climate movement in the United States has emerged which embraced the idea that climate policy is not just a matter of small adjustments and tougher regulation, but is a project that requires fundamental change throughout society. In a little more than two years, this idea has traveled from the party's young grassroots climate activists in the Sunrise Movement via the far left wing of Congress and into the center, becoming a mainstream political project in the Democratic Party.

Some 1 1/2 years ago, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi scornfully called the Green New Deal "the Green Dream or whatever they call it."* Today, it was the key to beating a Kennedy in Massachusetts and is one of the main sources of inspiration for Biden's Build Back Better plan.

Not So Big Oil

For decades, large oil and coal companies have attempted to prevent this transition. It is well documented that the industry has tried to obscure the public debate with misinformation like the tobacco and sugar industry did before them. Moreover, it is a well-known fact that companies have donated huge amounts to both parties.

In that sense, Biden's campaign marks a breakthrough in climate policy. He has refused to accept donations from fossil energy companies. A Biden supporter would argue that Biden has made an ideological choice. A more cynical assessment is that Biden has refused to accept dirty money because he can afford to do so.

“Big Oil” is not nearly as big as it used to be. Although Trump has done what he can to fulfill his election pledge to make fossil energy "big again," renewable energy sources keep getting cheaper, making it harder for coal and oil prices to be competitive.

Two weeks ago, ExxonMobil, the largest oil company in the United States, completely dropped off the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Similar to the Danish C20 index, the Dow Jones index calculates the 30 largest companies in the United States. ExxonMobil, formerly called Standard Oil, has been on that list for 92 years and, as late as 2011, it was the world's most valuable company. Today, Apple is worth more than 10 times as much as ExxonMobil was worth in 2011.

As symbolic as it may seem, during times of major shifts in the economy, a tech company has replaced ExxonMobil on the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Mobilization for War

In other words, there are opportunities. The United States has experienced a popular climate awakening, a new generation is leading a movement, the Democratic Party has taken over the agenda, and systemic dynamics in the economy have weakened the fossil fuel industry.

"And then the pandemic has shown us that it is possible, also in the United States, to invest an incredible amount of money in dealing with an urgent problem without the economy falling apart," climate researcher Gleick says.* The coronavirus crisis has driven the United States into a recession, he stresses, not the increased public aid packages.

"What we have learned from the pandemic has opened the door for us to envisage taking even more drastic measures to solve an even more drastic problem: the climate crisis," Gleick said.*

However, even if neither Gleick nor Kalmus are reluctant to use phrases such as “historical momentum” and “unique window of opportunity,” nothing is yet a given.

First, Biden must win. In the climate field, the distance between the two candidates could not be bigger. Trump withdrew the United States from the 2015 Paris climate agreement. Biden will make sure the United States signs back on the day after he takes office. Trump has reversed climate and environmental rules approximately 70 times. Biden will impose a significant part of the burden on the industry to meet climate goals. One could go on.

If Biden implements his climate plan, in all likelihood it requires that the Democrats manage to the House of Representatives and win back the Senate.

Then, of course, Biden and the newly elected majority in Congress must have the time and breathing room to deal with other things than the pandemic and the acute economic crisis.

The biggest challenge is a divided American population, Kalmus adds. If Biden gets a plan passed by Congress, it does not mean that the climate fight is over. Radical change is required at all levels of society. As of now, 68% of Democratic voters perceive the climate crisis as a "high-priority problem for society" versus 11% of Republican voters.

"If we want to achieve this, we need a completely new type of solidarity and mass mobilization similar to what happened during World War II, when everyone was moving in the same direction towards a common goal," says Kalmus. "And it is very difficult to imagine this without people living in the same reality and acknowledging the same scientific facts."*

Americans don’t do that. If anybody doubts how divided the American society is, one simply needs to look at the pandemic. If people do not accept wearing a mask or comply with social distancing guidelines to fight a pandemic that currently kills people nationwide, it is hard to imagine Americans agreeing to make even greater sacrifices to fight a far more abstract threat, Kalmus believes.

Can You Count on Biden?

Finally, a large portion of left-wing America is far from convinced that Biden intends to take drastic action.

As the socialist magazine Jacobin recently ran an article headlined “Think Joe Biden Will Be the Next FDR? His Wall Street Donors Don’t Seem To." Shortly before that, The New York Times revealed that the financial sector gave Biden and his supporters 275 million Danish krones (approximately $43.8 million at the time of this article). By comparison, Trump and his campaign organizations have received 55 million Danish krones (approximately $8.8 million).

People have also criticized Biden for refusing to ban fracking, allegedly for fear that it could potentially cost him the battleground state of Pennsylvania.

Kalmus is not convinced that Biden will deliver in the field of climate change.

“It is important to keep in mind that Biden's plan is not enough. CO2 neutrality by 2050 is not ambitious enough. It is still too little and too late," Kalmus says. However, there is momentum, and the "conversation" about climate has changed fundamentally. "At least we can appreciate that what seemed unrealistically ambitious a few years ago can be criticized as inadequate today."*

Gleick, on the other hand, cannot keep from cheering.

“Basically, I’m excited about the plan. A few years ago, it would have been unthinkable," says Gleick, who does not fear that the economic crisis or pandemic will push the climate agenda into the background. “It’s not one or the other. It is all things all at once."*

Climate President Biden; carved into Mount Rushmore among those who have drawn the broad outlines of American history.

It sounds unthinkable, but it could happen.

As Sanders' campaign leader Faiz Shakir recently observed, “The most transformative presidents in our nation’s history — Lincoln, FDR, LBJ — were not ideologues fully aligned with the most radical movements of their time.”* Instead, they at times worked with activists to move the ball forward and at other times trimmed their sails to meet the constraints of public opinion.

*Editor’s note: Although these remarks are accurately translated, they could not be independently verified.



Kandidaten, der ikke ville ændre noget, kan blive den store klimapræsident i USA’s historie

Lincoln, Roosevelt, Johnson, Biden? Under primærvalget lovede Biden, at intet ville ændre sig ’fundamentalt’. Siden da har verden roteret hurtigere end sædvanligt, den moderate kandidat går til valg på en historisk ambitiøs klimaplan, og det er ikke utænkeligt, at han bliver den næste i rækken af USA’s samfundsarkitekter: klimapræsidenten

Joe Bidens valgkampagne er et klimapolitisk nybrud. Han har nemlig afvist at tage imod donationer fra fossile energiselskaber. Den positive udlægning af den beslutning er, at Biden har truffet et ideologisk valg. En mere kynisk betragtning er, at Biden har sagt nej til de sorte penge, fordi han kunne.
Foto: Amr Alfiky

Joe Biden er ikke en radikal politiker. Gennem 50 år i politik har han sjældent markeret sig som særlig visionær, særlig venstreorienteret eller særlig klimabevidst.

Under primærvalget var han den mest moderate af alle demokratiske kandidater, og en tilbagevenden til verden, som den så ud før Donald Trump, fremstod som kernen i hans politiske projekt. I juni 2019 forklarede han ligefrem en forsamling velhavende demokratiske donorer, at »intet vil forandre sig fundamentalt«, hvis han blev præsident.

Denne sommer, godt et år senere, sad Bernie Sanders så i et tv-program på kanalen NBC. »Ved du hvad,« sagde han til værten. »Joe Biden kan blive den mest progressive præsident siden Franklin Delano Roosevelt.«

På det tidspunkt havde Joe Biden lige præsenteret det mest venstreorienterede, samfundsomvæltende program, en demokratisk kandidat er gået til valg på i årtier. Enorme billionbeløb til boliger, job, velfærd, bedre arbejdsløshedsunderstøttelse og højere mindsteløn.

Klassisk venstreorienteret krise- og fordelingspolitik krydret med elementer af den økonomiske nationalisme, som Trump gik til valg på med så stor succes i 2016. Vidste man ikke bedre, ville man måske kalde det demokratisk socialisme.

Mest opsigtsvækkende er imidlertid Joe Bidens 10,5 billioner kroner dyre klimaplan, som skal gøre det amerikanske energinet fossilfrit i 2035 og hele USA CO2-neutralt i 2050.

»Videnskabeligt kan man argumentere for en endnu højere målsætning, men politisk er det en meget, meget progressiv plan. Aldrig tidligere er en kandidat gået til valg på en klimapolitik, der er så ambitiøs, så omfattende og så vidtgående,« vurderer forskeren Peter Gleick, som var med til at stifte klimatænketanken Pacific Institute i 1987.

Vendingen Green New Deal optræder ikke i Bidens Plan for Clean Energy Revolution and Environmental Justice. Men den grundlæggende idé går igen. Massive, røde offentlige investeringer skal splejses med grønne hensyn. Ved at bygge bæredygtige huse, etablere et nyt elnet, udvide offentlig transport og hjælpe bilindustrien med at omstille til el vil Biden pumpe økonomien i gang og sætte skub i den grønne omstilling.

»Vi står med en økonomi i krise, men en utrolig mulighed for at ikke bare at genopbygge det, vi havde før, men bygge bedre, stærkere og mere bæredygtigt,« forklarede Biden selv med henvisning til coronakrisen.

Det er sloganet for Bidens kampagne. Build Back Better.

Joe Biden er nok den samme som for et år siden, men omstændighederne har ændret sig dramatisk. Utroligt nok virker det ikke usandsynligt, at kandidaten, der lovede ikke at ændre noget, kan ende som klimapræsidenten, der sætter gang i den store omstilling i USA.

Kampen om klimaet

Kampen om at blive USA’s næste præsident handler om andet end meningsmålinger, og hvem der kan skræmme vælgerne med enten trumpismen eller den radikale venstrefløj.

Trump og Biden har to radikalt forskellige tilgange til klimapolitik, og Biden kan blive den grønne omstillings globale leder, hvis han vinder.

I dag skriver vi om Bidens klimaplan og i næste uge fortæller vi om, hvad fire år med Trump har betydet for klima og miljø.

Endelig en bevægelse

Den økonomiske krise er ikke den eneste faktor, der har åbnet et »mulighedsrum« for klimakampen i Amerika, forklarer Peter Gleick, som har fulgt den amerikanske klimadebat i årtier.

»Over de senere år er det, som om at erkendelsen af, at det her virkeligt, alvorligt og kræver radikal handling, endelig har bundfældet sig hos en væsentlig andel af befolkningen og i Det Demokratiske Parti,« siger han.

Det skyldes til dels, at konsekvenserne af klimaforandringerne bliver mere konkrete og åbenlyse. Lige nu – i skrivende stund – er himlen for eksempel orange over San Francisco, efter en serie voldsomme skovbrande. 2,5 millioner hektar skov er futtet af, otte mennesker er døde, og hele staten Californien har været i undtagelsestilstand siden 18. august.

»Jeg føle klimaforandringerne på min egen krop,« forklarer en anden klimaforsker Peter Kalmus over en Skype-forbindelse fra det sydlige Californien.

»Man kan se flammerne, lugte røgen og føle varmen. Det er umuligt at ignorere.«

Peter Kalmus, som forsker ved University of California, mener først og fremmest, at det er et generationsspørgsmål. 80 procent af amerikanere under 30 år opfatter klimaforandringer som en væsentlig trussel mod menneskeheden, og de er langt mere forandringsvillige end deres forældre.

»Jeg oplevede, at det virkelig tog fart for to år siden. Der kom en ny rapport for FN’s klimapanel, Greta Thunberg sprang i luften, og videnskabsfolkene begyndte at tale i en mere alarmerende tone,« siger han. »I USA har klimasagen ellers altid levet et stille liv i skyggen, som kun en lille, snæver kreds bekymrede sig om.«

Men endelig trængte klimapolitik igennem til en bredere offentlighed. »Endelig havde vi en bevægelse,« siger Peter Kalmus.

Ekspresfart til mainstream

Mange har frygtet, at den bevægelse ville miste pusten som følge af COVID-19. Med 200.000 amerikanere fremstår pandemien som det altoverskyggende tema, og for nylig viste en måling fra Pew Research, at amerikanerne betragtede klima som det 11.-væsentligste politikområde i valgkampen.

Alligevel mener Peter Gleick, at der er håb, ikke mindst fordi klimadagsordenen har sat sig i Det Demokratiske Parti. Et godt eksempel på det skete for to uger siden, da den grønne fløj i partiet brød noget, der minder om en naturlov i amerikansk politik. De slog en Kennedy i Massachusetts.

74-årige Ed Markey har siddet i Kongressen længere tid, end Robert Kennedys barnebarn Joe Kennedy III har været i live. Alligevel blev det udlagt som det nye og unges sejr over det gamle og etablerede, da han vandt primærvalget om at blive partiets bud på en senator i et meget demokratisk indstillet distrikt.

»Det betyder ikke noget, hvor gammel du er. Det handler om, hvor gamle dine ideer er,« sagde partiets 30-årige stjerneskud Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) i en af Markeys kampagnevideoer.

Og Markeys mest berømte idé er ikke mere end to år gammel. The Green New Deal. Ideen om at væve omstilling og store offentlige investeringer sammen som en grøn pendant til Roosevelts reformprogram fra 1930’erne kriseår opstod på græsrodsniveau i partiet, men det var Markey og AOC, som bragte det færdige reformprogram ind i Kongressen.

Centrale punkter i Bidens klimaplan

• 10,5 billioner kroner i grønne offentlige investeringer over 10 år
• Fossilfri energinet i 2035.
• USA skal være CO2-neutralt i 2050.
• Fossilfri offentlig transport og cykelstier i alle byer med mere end 100.000 indbyggere
• Omfattende energirenovationer af boliger og offentlige bygninger
• En million nye job i bilindustrien ved at øge incitamenter til at investere i el-biler
• Alle nye infrastruktursprojekter skal bidrage til at reducere udledningerne.
• ’Udsatte befolkningsgrupper’ skal have mindst 40 procent af ’gevinsterne’ ved de offentlige investeringer.

John Podesta, som er tidligere stabschef for Bill Clinton og central rådgiver for Obama, sagde om Markeys sejr, at den har sendt et »umisforståeligt signal om, at klimapolitikken har ændret sig, og man nu kan vinde valg på at omfavne en gennemgribende handling«.

Joe Bidens klimaplan er ikke The Green New Deal. Økonomisk venstreorienterede elementer af Cortez’ og Markeys oprindelige plan, som en landsdækkende jobgaranti, er pillet ud.

Men på lidt over to år – siden der »endelig« opstod en bred klimabevægelse i USA – er ideen om, at klimapolitik ikke kun er et spørgsmål om små justeringer og hårdere regulering, men er et projekt, der kræver fundamentale forandringer i hele samfundet, rejst fra partiets unge græsrødder i den klimaaktivistiske Sunrise-bevægelse via den yderste venstrefløj i Kongressen og ind i midten af den politiske mainstream i Det Demokratiske Partis projekt.

For halvandet år siden kaldte partiets leder i Repræsentanternes Hus, Nancy Pelosi, det hånligt »the Green Dream or whatever« – den grønne drøm eller hvad de kalder det. I dag er det nøglen til at slå en Kennedy i Massachusetts og en af de væsentligste inspirationskilder til Joe Bidens projekt om Build Back Better.

Not so Big Oil

I årtier har store olie- og kulselskaber forsøgt at stille sig i vejen for omstillingen. Det er veldokumenteret, at branchen – ligesom tobaks- og sukkerindustrien før dem – har forsøgt at forplumre den offentlige debat med misinformation. Og det er en kendt sag, at virksomhederne har givet enorme donationer til begge partier.

Også i den forstand markerer Joe Bidens kampagne et klimapolitisk nybrud. Han har nemlig afvist at tage imod donationer fra fossile energiselskaber. Den positive udlægning af den beslutning er, at Biden har truffet et ideologisk valg. En mere kynisk betragtning er, at Biden har sagt nej til de sorte penge, fordi han kunne.

Big Oil er nemlig ikke nær så stort, som det har været. Selv om Trump har gjort, hvad han kunne for at indfri sit valgløfte om at gøre fossil energi »stort igen,« er vedvarende energikilder fortsat med at falde i pris, mens kul og olie har stadig sværere ved at konkurrere.

For to uger siden røg USA’s største olieselskab, ExxonMobil, helt ud af Dow Jones-børsens Industry Average, der på samme måde som det danske C20-indeks opgør de 30 største firmaer i USA. Selskabet, der tidligere hed Standard Oil, har ellers været på listen i 92 år, og var så sent som i 2011 verdens mest værdifulde selskab. I dag er Apple mere end ti gange så meget værd.

Som en tyk symbolsk streg under et større skift i økonomien er det da også et techfirma, som erstatter ExxonMobile på Dow Jones’ Industry Average.

Krigsmobilisering

Med andre ord er der altså muligheder. USA har oplevet en folkelig klimaopvågnen, en ny generation fører an i en bevægelse, Det Demokratiske Parti har overtaget dagsordenen, og systemiske bevægelser i økonomien har svækket den fossile industri.

»Og så har pandemien vist os, at det er muligt, også i USA, at investere ufatteligt mange penge på at håndtere et presserende problem, uden at økonomien falder fra hinanden,« siger klimaforsker Peter Gleick. Det er coronakrisen, ikke de øgede offentlige udgifter til hjælpepakker, som har sendt USA i recession, understreger han.

»Erfaringerne fra pandemien har åbnet døren for, at vi kan forestille at tage endnu mere drastiske midler i brug for at løse et endnu mere drastisk problem: klimakrisen,« siger Peter Gleick.
Men selv om hverken Peter Gleick eller Peter Kalmus holder igen med vendinger som »historisk momentum« og »unikt mulighedsrum«, er intet givet endnu.

Først og fremmest kræver det en sejr til Joe Biden. På klimaområdet kunne skellet mellem de to kandidat ikke være skarpere. Trump har meldt USA ud af Parisaftalen. Biden vil melde landet ind igen, dagen efter han har tiltrådt. Trump har lempet eller fjernet krav og reguleringer på klima- og miljøområdet omkring 70 gange. Biden vil pålægge industrien en væsentlig del af byrden for at indfri klimamålene. Og man kunne blive ved.

Skal Bidens klimaplan blive til virkelighed, kræver det med al sandsynlighed også, demokraterne forsvarer deres flertal i Repræsentanternes Hus og vinder flertal i Senatet.
Og så kræver det naturligvis, at Biden og den nye kongres overhovedet får tid og luft til at håndtere andet end pandemien og den akutte økonomiske krise.

Den største udfordring, tilføjer Peter Kalmus, er imidlertid den splittede amerikanske befolkning. Klimakampen er ikke vundet, bare fordi Biden får en plan igennem Kongressen. Den kræver radikal omstilling på alle niveauer af samfundet. Lige nu opfatter 68 procent af demokratiske vælgere klimakrisen som et »højt prioriteret samfundsproblem« mod 11 procent af republikanerne.

»Hvis vi skal klare det her, har vi brug for en helt ny form for solidaritet og en massemobilisering på samme måde, som man så under Anden Verdenskrig, hvor alle trak i samme retning mod et fælles mål,« siger Kalmus. »Og det er meget svært at forestille sig uden et folk, der lever i den samme virkelighed og anerkender de samme videnskabelige kendsgerninger.«

Det gør amerikanerne ikke. Var nogen i tvivl om, hvor splittet det amerikanske samfund er, har man blot skullet følge med i pandemien. Hvis man ikke blive enige om at tage mundbind på eller holde afstand for at bekæmpe en pandemi, som slår folk ihjel her og nu over hele landet, er det svært at forestille sig amerikanerne blive enige om at gøre endnu større ofre for at bekæmpe en langt mere abstrakt trussel, mener Kalmus.

Kan man regne med Biden?

Endelig er der en stor del af den amerikanske venstrefløj, som langtfra er overbevist om, at Joe Biden har tænkt sig at gå radikalt nok til værks.

Som det for nylig hed i en overskrift på det venstreorienterede magasin Jacobin: »Tror du, Joe Biden bliver den næste Roosevelt? Det gør hans støtter på Wall Street ikke.«
Kort forinden havde The New York Times afsløret, at Joe Biden – og grupper der støtter ham – tilsammen har modtaget 275 millioner kroner fra finanssektoren. Til sammenligning har Trump og hans kampagneorganisationer modtaget 55 millioner.

Det har også vakt kritik, at Biden har afvist at ville forbyde fracking – angiveligt af frygt for at det potentielt vil kunne koste ham svingstaten Pennsylvania.

Peter Kalmus ikke overbevist om, at Biden vil levere på klimaområdet.

»Det er vigtigt at huske på, at Bidens plan ikke er nok. CO2-neutralitet i 2050 er ikke ambitiøst nok. Det er stadig for lidt og for sent«. Men der er et momentum, og »samtalen« om klima har ændret sig fundamentalt. »Vi kan i hvert fald glæde os over, at det, der virkede urealistisk ambitiøst for få år siden, kan vi i dag kritisere som utilstrækkeligt,« siger han.

Peter Gleick derimod har svært ved at få armene ned.

»Grundlæggende set er jeg begejstret for planen. For få år siden havde det været utænkeligt,« siger Gleick, som heller ikke frygter, at den økonomiske krise eller pandemien kommer til at skubbe klimadagsordenen i baggrunden.«

»Det er ikke det ene eller det andet. Det er alt sammen på en gang,« siger Gleick.

Klimapræsidenten Joe Biden. Hakket ind i Mount Rushmore blandt de af sine forgængere, der har trukket de helt store linjer i USA’s historie.

Det er ikke så utænkeligt, som det lyder.

Som Bernie Sanders kampagneleder Faiz Shakir erkendte for nylig, er de mest omvæltende forandringer i USA’s historie ikke sket på foranledninger af stærkt ideologiske præsidenter, der regerede i fuld overensstemmelse med tidens radikale bevægelse, men af moderate politikere som Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt og Lyndon Johnson, der navigerede frem og tilbage mellem aktivisternes krav, de politiske realiteter og den offentlige mening.

This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Israel: Trump’s National Security Adviser Forgot To Leave Personal Agenda at Home and Fell

Germany: Absolute Arbitrariness

Mexico: The Trump Problem

Taiwan: Making America Great Again and Taiwan’s Crucial Choice

Venezuela: Vietnam: An Outlet for China

Topics

Germany: Absolute Arbitrariness

Israel: Trump’s National Security Adviser Forgot To Leave Personal Agenda at Home and Fell

Mexico: The Trump Problem

Taiwan: Making America Great Again and Taiwan’s Crucial Choice

Venezuela: Vietnam: An Outlet for China

Russia: Political Analyst Reveals the Real Reason behind US Tariffs*

Poland: Meloni in the White House. Has Trump Forgotten Poland?*

Related Articles

Russia: Trump’s Tariffs Slammed by Critics Who Forgot How To Stand Up for Their Own Citizens*

Poland: Democrats Capitulate to Trump

Saudi Arabia: Trump Bullish but America Divided

Ireland: Irish Examiner View: Democrats Are Responding Too Slowly