CSPAN/Newsmakers
October 1, 2009
1:00 p.m. EST
STEVE SCULLY,
HOST, NEWSMAKERS: Joining us on
Newsmakers on this Sunday is California Senator, Barbara Boxer, the Chair of
the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. And joining us for the questioning is Juliet Eilperin of the
Washington Post and Dina Cappiello of the Associated Press.
Senator,
let’s begin with a broad question about your proposal, announced last week,
along with Senator John Kerry. How, in
the short term, do you reduce emissions over the next 11 years by 20 percent
and keep American industry competitive in the global economy?
BARBARA
BOXER, DEMOCRATIC SENATOR FROM CALIFORNIA:
Well first of all, you probably know this is a gradual decrease, so we
don’t say tomorrow you have to reduce by 20 percent; it’s 20 percent by 2020. In addition, because of the recession and
because of some changes in habits, carbon emissions are going down. They’ve gone down about six percent already,
so it’s less of a climb.
Having said
that, your question is very important.
We think that this bill is great for business, is great for America’s
prosperity and American leadership in the world, and green jobs. We know these are jobs that will stay
here. And I’m not just saying this as
rhetoric; I can give you a couple of backups.
John Doerr,
who’s this very big venture capitalist from Silicon Valley, who funded Google
and Amazon, says that the capital that’s going to flow into these new clean
engine technologies are going to dwarf the capital that flowed into biotech and
high-tech combined. And he testified in
front of our committee a couple of times on that.
So we think
this is the ticket, first of all, to face up to this great challenge of global
warming that the world’s leading scientists say could be devastating if we do
nothing, and also, it’s a great economic opportunity. And Pew Charitable Trust has come out with the green job creation
in California, which is we’ve had a bleak time there. That’s the one bright spot and UC Berkeley just said there’d be a
couple of million jobs created if legislation like ours passed.
So I would
just say it’s scare tactics on the part of our opponents. They have every right to say what they you
know think or worry about to say that this is bad for the economy. We think it’s just what the economy needs.
SCULLY: Dina Cappiello of the Associated Press.
DINA
CAPPIELLO, NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL REPORTER, ASSOCIATED PRESS: Hi, Senator.
BOXER: Hi, Dina.
CAPPIELLO: Only 20 percent; obviously you guys came out
of the box with this Senate version at the 20 percent by 2020 reduction. The House, as you know, tried the same
thing, only to have it scaled back to 17 percent to assuage, basically coal
state lawmakers. How confident are you that
this ambitious midterm target will stick and how are you going to assure that
it does?
BOXER: Well the fact is, as you know, how a bill
becomes a law, if we get it through the Senate with the 20 and we go into
conference with 17, the House will fight for their position and we’ll for ours. I can’t predict the endgame. I’m responsible for you know a couple of
steps in the process and I take it very seriously.
This is the
Environment Committee, not the Pollution Committee. You know we really are the Environment and Public Works
Committee. This should be you know the
high water mark and we’re going to try to convince our colleagues, Senator
Kerry and I, and have great members on that committee, that this is a goal that
makes sense, because we already know that because of the recession and because
of you know change in habits.
We are
already seeing a great reduction in carbon.
We’re very excited about it; already down six percent, so in essence,
we’ve already gone part of the way. So
we think that 20 percent is the right number.
We’ll fight for that, but there are many other things that we’re going
to have to fight about in this whole battle you know to get this done.
JULIET
EILPERIN, NATIONAL ENVIRONMENT REPORTER, WASHINGTON POST: Hi, Senator.
BOXER: Hi.
EILPERIN: What I wanted to ask about is the issue of
the allowance and how they’re going to be distributed, since this is clearly an
open question, given the language in your bill right now. Now obviously when Chairman Henry Waxman
introduced his bill, he didn’t identify allowances as well, although again,
that was several months ago. And
there’s a real question of how many will be given away for free? Now obviously, President Obama, during the
campaign, wanted 100 percent of them auctioned off. The final House bill initially gives away 85 percent of the
allowances.
It sounds
like there could be a scenario where the Environment Committee has a different
recommendation on allowances, compared to the Finance Committee that also has
jurisdiction on it. Could you clarify
what you’re seeking to do on that?
BOXER: Sure, sure.
Well let me talk about jurisdiction.
We think we have the jurisdiction.
We’ve had it the last few times the bill has come forward on allowances,
so we will be, in chairman’s mark, distributing those allowances.
I have told
Senator Baucus of the Finance Committee, if he thinks he has jurisdiction, I
have no problem with him doing his own plan.
This is fine. The more people
get involved in this the better, because we find the more committee involvement
you know the more collaboration, the more people get into the weeds on this, in
– because you have to understand what you’re doing.
But let me
just say, to give you a little bit of a story, we don’t intend to really change
too much what the House did and we said when we sat down with pen and pad. We said we’re really using the House bill as
a base because, as you know, there was a huge amount of give and take
there. We don’t want to reinvent the
wheel and reinvent the problems, but we will have some tweaks.
And I would
just say that, just like the House, the vast majority of the allowances are
going to consumers to keep them whole, because we get back to the initial
question. We want to make sure
consumers are in good shape and actually benefit, not only from the jobs that
will be created, but also, as we move to the clean energy, we don’t want them
having to pay a lot more for their electricity and that’s a primary focus of
the allowance distribution.
CAPPIELLO: So just to clarify on that, got two – kind
of two questions. One is so are you
personally asking and lobbying for what the House bill had, which is 85 percent
for free? I mean where do you
personally stand on the allocation issue?
BOXER: Well we’ve already decided the allocations
with the committee members and they’ll be revealed in a few days, but I don’t
want to reveal them now because we might make a couple of tweaks. It’s already been done; the work’s been
done.
CAPPIELLO: And obviously you know this is a big
placeholder, this piece, this allocation piece of the bill. So I mean how is it that, with this kind of
question mark, and obviously you’re going to reveal it in a few days.
BOXER: Yes.
CAPPIELLO: But the Republicans are already coming back
with a national energy tax, the cap and tax you know all the things they used
on the House. How do you counter their
claims when that part of a bill isn’t spelled out yet and also when the very
basis of cap and trade is to set a price signal to force a change in habits?
BOXER: Well there’s already a huge – that’s already
in the bill; 11 at the bottom and 28 at the top, so we’ve settled the soft
collar, so we’re very clear on price.
And we’re very excited about that because we took the best of all the
ideas out there and cost containment ideas.
So we have a soft collar. At 28
you’ll see the allowances come flooding in, so we’re happy cause we think it’ll
stop market speculation and it’s certainty and the business community loves
that part of our bill.
But let me
just say, so to my Republican friends who may be watching, until we reveal this
in a couple of days, 70 percent of the allowances go to the consumer and the
rest divided along the same lines as the – as the House bill.
EILPERIN: And, Senator, one of the other big kind of
pieces of news this week happening on the same day as the release of your bill
was the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposal in terms of targeting the –
basically the identical number of facilities that you’re targeting in your
bill. And obviously you’ve spoken in
the past about how the prospect of regulation by the executive branch, as opposed
to regulating CO2 and other greenhouse gases through Congress could have an
effect on the dynamics on Capitol Hill.
It really
could go two ways, in terms of either spurring action or obviously prompting
somewhat of a backlash. Can you give a
sense of what do you think is the significance of what EPA’s doing right now
and what does that mean for the prospects of climate legislation?
BOXER: Well what kind of backlash are you talking
about? Because well (ph) if you explain
that then it sounds …
EILPERIN: Thinks like, for example – sorry. Senator Murkowski, for example, the top
Republican on the Energy Committee, has obviously raised the prospect of
barring the EPA from acting and arguing that it’s inappropriate. Obviously in your bill you reserve the right
for the Environmental Protection Agency to have jurisdiction under the Clean
Air Act, and so there certainly is a lot of talk, even among some centrist
Democrats, that they’re concerned about EPA moving to regulate greenhouse gases
before they have a chance to deliberate on it.
BOXER: Very good.
I wanted you to expand because I was hoping you were going in that
direction. Yes, we already have had an
attack on the Clean Air Act by Senator Murkowski, which we were able to, let’s
– shall we say, put off for another date.
It was shocking to me that some of my colleagues want to repeal the
Clean Air Act as it relates to carbon.
This very
conservative Bush Supreme Court ruled five to four that carbon is a pollutant
regulated under the Clean Air Act. If
anyone reads the Clean Air Act, the language is so clear. I am not an attorney, but I read that. It was very clear. It says this Clean Air Act covers you know and it names all the
gases and it said “any pollutant related to climate change.” So clearly you know carbon and greenhouse gases,
they have been judged to be pollutants under the Clean Air Act.
The EPA has
no choice. This isn’t about Lisa
Jackson waking up one morning and saying I’m worried about global warming; I’m
worried about agriculture losing it in America because the climate’s so
hot. I’m worried about my grandmother
you know having to live in 105 degrees weather. I’m worried about droughts, fire, and floods. I mean she may worry about it. I think people should.
But that’s
not what this is about. It’s about Lisa
Jackson you know reading the Clean Air Act and recognizing that she has to act
to control carbon. If she doesn’t
she’ll get sued you know really by the people who are fighting on behalf of the
families that I represent, the hardworking families who you know are facing
this pollution.
So
absolutely, I expect people to go try and repeal the Clean Air Act and I expect
them to try to repeal the Endangered Species Act and the Safe Drinking Water
Act and the Clean Water Act, the landmark.
Well they have never liked them and this is just an excuse for them to
come in.
Now I think
the EPA is doing what they have to do under the law. You know it’s – there’s a danger to global warming. Guess who said that, the Bush
administration; we have their words and all the scientists and the American
Academy of Sciences. So either we step
up to the plate and resolve it; now we can resolve it in two ways.
One is to let
the EPA do their work and I support that.
But I think it’s foolish not to do it our way, which gives much more
flexibility; the ability to buy offsets, the ability to really create jobs and
do the kinds of things that we want to do, so.
SCULLY: Will you get Republican support for your
bill?
BOXER: I don’t know. The last vote, we had 54 people voting to move forward. We didn’t get the 60. We had 54 people who voted or sent letters;
they weren’t there. And that was the
Lieberman-Warner-Boxer Proposal, the one – that was the high water market, 54
saying they wanted to go forward. The
one before that was 37, Lieberman-McCain.
And the one before that was McCain-Lieberman; I think it go a little
more forties, about that.
So we’re
gaining you know we’re gaining ground, but at this point, I don’t – I can’t count
to 60, like I can’t on healthcare either, yet.
But you just do your job and you move forward. And I think the big difference is in – that this time, with this
bill, which is the Kerry-Boxer Bill, there’s a lot more support out in the
country that’s organized. And we have
an administration that is helping – will help and that makes a big
difference. The last time we had an
administration that was against this.
So at this point, I can’t report to you Republicans, but I – Senator
Kerry and I have been talking to Republicans and we’re very hopeful.
SCULLY: Ten years in the House, though, 17 years in
the Senate; is it any different whether it’s this bill on environmental
legislation or healthcare? Is the
atmosphere any different now than it has been in the past?
BOXER: That’s a great question. There’s a big difference in the political
parties, in my opinion. This is my
view; it’s not scientific, just having watched. I’ve watched the Democratic Party become a larger and larger
umbrella. I mean we have people to my
left in the caucus and people to my right in my caucus. And the Republicans – and so it’s a large
umbrella and really, what has happened to the national Republicans, it’s a very
small umbrella and if anyone peaks outside they get drenched. I mean that’s sort of my view of it.
And there are
just a few now, a couple, two or three you know Arlen Specter became a
Democrat. Some of the moderate
Republicans were pushed out in their primaries. It’s very different. Now
every piece of legislation I’ve ever done, and I’ve got a lot of them that
became law; I did with Republican co-sponsor.
I don’t have one yet for the Kerry-Boxer bill. I’m looking. If anyone’s
watching, please dial in.
CAPPIELLO: The other thing, as you know, Senator, besides
pending EPA regulation looming over your head, is the international
negotiations in Copenhagen for our new treaty.
BOXER: OK.
The EPA regulations are not hanging over my head. They actually help us, which is I think the
point that was made, because it shows that you know we’re going to get this
carbon regulated one way or the other, so I think that helps us and Copenhagen.
CAPPIELLO: And Copenhagen, and obviously you know we’re
weeks away from the meeting in Copenhagen.
Where do you see this bill being at that point?
BOXER: Right.
It’s a good question.
CAPPIELLO: And how realistic are you that you know it
will hit the floor? I mean where will
it be?
BOXER: That’s a very good question. I think it – we’re going to move ahead in
our committee and I believe we should be able to pass a good bill out of
there. Never say for sure, but it looks
good. And that will be progress.
Listen, it’s
hard to describe to people, cause you when you read bill – book on how a bill
becomes a law, it sounds so simple. You
write the bill; you drop it in the hopper.
You know it has a hearing in the subcommittee; it has a hearing in full
committee. Oh, it goes on the floor,
you debate, you pass it; that’s how they describe. Lordy (ph), it’s very different from that.
So it’s hard
for me to predict you know how this all moves, but I would predict that before
Copenhagen there will be progress in the Senate. I think just the introduction; I was making a joke the other day
about and said it’s like giving birth. I
know you just did and will (ph), so it really is. Writing a bill of this magnitude is; it takes a lot of hard work.
So it was a
very good feeling to get that step done.
It’s a positive step, just the introduction of the bill, cause so many
people collaborated. It was not one of
these sitting down alone. We went in –
late into the night. We went – I mean
some of – some of our staff were there till 3:00, 4:00 in the morning, just
getting to this point that we really had a good feeling that we had reached a
good balance and we have a little more to go.
EILPERIN: Just following up on that, given you know
where things stand now and the House-passed bill, to what extent would you say
to President Obama and his negotiators, going to Copenhagen, that they could
feel comfortable signing off on an international agreement that has emissions
reductions targets for the U.S. that essentially mirrors maybe something in
between the House bill and the Senate bill?
To what extent would you say go ahead; Congress has given you good
enough marching orders that you can commit to this?
BOXER: Well I don’t give marching orders to the
President. I wish I could. But I think he could be very confident that
in America we are starting to do our part.
Listen, I come from California.
It’s unbelievable. We have taken
the lead on this. Energy efficiency in
California is such an important part of our way of life. We have stayed even; all through you know
the last 20 years, our per capita energy use, per capita, is lower than the
national average by this much.
And I always
do this and I know it’s not so great on TV, but this much. So the space in here is the low-hanging
fruit. This is where you can easily you
know do it. How do you do it? You know better efficiency on your –
efficiencies on your appliances, whether it’s your refrigerator, whether it’s
your air conditioner; all of that. You
know just being mindful; using the bulbs, all the things that we do there that
has kept our energy use flat over all these years, while the rest of the
country’s gone straight up.
So I think,
just in the regular budget process, with this, I think, great new President;
And he understands this issue so well and he served on the Environment
Committee for a while with me. You know
we’re going to use the regular budgetary process to fund programs – we did it
in the stimulus – that are going to invest in clean energy and energy
efficiencies and help the mayors of our – of our nation.
And by the
way, I want to point out – so just to get to you, cause I can go off on
tangent; I don’t want to. To get to
your point, I think he can be confident that the House has passed a bill; the
Senate is working its will. It’s going
forward; it is going forward. Don’t
forget, Senator Bingaman has passed an energy bill as well. So there’s lots of ways we’re moving on
this, and California and many of the western states, the northeast states. There’s compacts happening. There’s going to be all kinds of more states
that this week, coming up, the thousandth mayor is going to sign on to dedicate
himself or herself, as – I don’t know if it’s a man or a woman, to this climate
change issue.
So they’re
acting locally. They’re acting in the
states. They’re acting in the
regions. EPA is acting under the Clean
Air Act. So I feel, if I were the
President – if I were, I would just feel we’re doing this, one way or the
other. You know whether we do it this
way or that way, we’re going. Half of
that – a very big part of my bill are authorizations of new programs to help
cities, counties, states you know bring energy efficiency to their people, to
help with fire prevention, flood control, training of nuclear workers in
nuclear facilities and research and development on technology.
So there’s a
lot in our bill that isn’t part of the more controversial, shall we say,
formerly called cap and trade you know now called pollution reduction and
investment part. And so I would feel
good about it if I were the President and I think our venture capital’s already
starting to flow. It will flow much
more if we do the national bill, so I would feel confident in going to
Copenhagen and signing a good agreement and always being mindful that we have
to make sure all the countries of the world are onboard. Otherwise we got to be careful. We need to make sure everyone is onboard
with this.
CAPPIELLO: You just gave me a great segue,
Senator. There seemed – there seemed to
be, when you announced the bill and had your rally and press conference out on
the – on the Capitol lawn a shift in emphasis in terms of why this bill was needed. I mean we saw that in the House, but I mean
it was much stronger at your press conference and rally from a – something (ph)
talking less about we need to do this to kind of stave off the most severe
effects of climate change and global warming and more about economic security,
economic growth, and national security.
BOXER: Yes.
CAPPIELLO: Many military people spoke, rather than the
big green groups.
BOXER: Yes.
CAPPIELLO: How does that play into your strategy? I mean you, yourself, said cap and trade’s
not the term anymore.
BOXER: That’s right.
CAPPIELLO: It’s not pollution reduction and …
BOXER: Investment.
CAPPIELLO: … and investment. How is that playing into your strategy?
BOXER: Well the reason, just to say – to finish up
on the – the reason we changed to pollution reduction and investment is no one
really understood what cap and trade meant.
You could be talking about you know putting a cap on a baseball player
and trading him to another team. I mean
no one got it. So we’re saying
pollution reduction and investment. We
think it makes – it explains it more.
But you’re
absolutely right you know. When I
teamed up with John Kerry, one of his passions in dealing with this issue, and
I’m so proud to be working with him because he’s worked on this so long and he
comes at it, not only from an environmental perspective, but also from a
national security perspective. I mean
this is a man who ran for President; this is a man who spoke to the leaders of
the world. This is – he’s very well
prepared on this issue and as the Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee,
on which I serve.
And you know
he thinks that not enough people see this issue as a national security issue or
an economic security issue. So we
discussed this and decided it’s time that we put that right out there. And the words from you know admirals,
generals, people who serve in the military are very you know are listened
to. And they’re basically saying this
is a threat to our future; famine, drought, refugees. That all poses great problems to our national security and the
security of the world and you know we think people have to take a look at this.
And there’s
one more issue I think is so salient and that is that every single day in
America we spend a billion dollars a day to import our energy from a lot of
countries who don’t love us very much and who wind up using it against us; a
billion dollars a day. I mean it’s a
shocking number. Why wouldn’t we, for
our national security’s sake and our economic security’s sake, take control of
our energy future; keep those dollars home.
And so we’re
very excited about this and you know we know some people don’t see it this
way. Maybe they don’t want to see it
this way, but we really do. And we feel
that this message that you point out was one of the very strong messages of our
press conference. We don’t think the
American people have focused on that message and so we wanted to drive it home.
EILPERIN: Do you see that swaying votes? I mean have you kind of tested it out? Are you bringing some of the swing voters
onboard with that message? Or are they
kind of saying, as one Republican aide said to me yesterday, is this lipstick
on cap and trade?
BOXER: I’m glad they didn’t say lipstick on a pig,
but I hear you. Well, it’s – ever since
I got into this issue many years ago, I prepared a kind of a global warming 101
thing. I still have it around. It’s sort of my first attempt to explain this
to a lot of people who didn’t understand.
And we had about three or four pages on warnings from our national
security people about this issue.
So this issue
has been there a long time, but it hasn’t been brought to the floor. It was Senator Kerry’s notion to bring it to
the floor and it goes hand in hand with this billion dollars a day leaving our
country, going to nations who don’t love us or like us, and you know it helps
those nations and doesn’t help us and we want to see that money stay here.
Now does that
work well with voters? Yes. And I just looked at some very interesting
polling data; very recent polling data.
And I don’t know – I don’t remember – Berenson (ph) Group – I think I’m
remembering it right – that said that 63 percent of the people supported us
doing a bill like this. That’s
terrific. And many people said if you
didn’t vote for it they would vote against you.
So you know I
think the resistance we have in the Senate, and there’s a lot of resistance, as
you pointed out, in the Republican party particularly, and in a few regions,
doesn’t really add up to what’s happening in the real world. And just to say none of us knows you know
where this all leads, but I know this.
We’re going to tackle this issue with – through these authorizations, if
we can, through this pollution reduction investment piece, through the EPA,
through State of California, which will have its own program, the western
states, Reg E (ph) is kind of you know a silly way to go, but we’re going to go
that way you know whatever happens, because I think – I’ve said this before,
the people get it out there.
The people
get it and some of my colleagues don’t get it and I’m going to work as hard as
I can to – with my colleagues on the committee, with John Kerry, with others
off the committee who care, to persuade them.
We’ll do our very best. You know
I always say this, like you never know when you’re going to be born, you never
know what the challenge is you’re going to face. Who knew? You didn’t know
when, and your kids; they don’t choose you know. We’re here.
And you know
when Al Gore said an inconvenient truth; I thought what does he mean? It’s very inconvenient. I mean it’s certainly been inconvenient for
a lot of us because for years it’s taken a lot of time. There’s no way to close your eyes to the
truth. And the truth is, at the rate
we’re going, it spells trouble for your kids and my grandkids and you know.
SCULLY: How much trouble?
BOXER: Well we could put it into exact numbers for
you, but the scientists are very clear what will happen to the U.S. and other
nations of the world; with rising waters, with agricultural regions that can no
longer grow agriculture, with rainfall that now doesn’t exist, snowpack that
doesn’t exist. We’ve been told by
American scientists in my committee that up to 50 percent of God’s species
would no longer be here and that’s you know I’m a – I’m a spiritual
person. We have a lot of – a lot of
faith-based people in our coalition.
You know we could – we could just say it’s inconvenient to talk about
it. It’s not pleasant.
I thought Tom
Udall did a great job in the committees, one of the new members of the
committee from New Mexico, of talking about how it would affect his state. He did – he has such a beautiful state with
these gorgeous mountains and the you know just beautiful flora and fauna
there. And he said what would happen in
his state if the worst happen and we just didn’t get our arms around this; it
would be like dropping the state down 300 miles, I think he said. And it would be like a little town in Mexico
that’s a dessert you know wasteland that has nothing. And it’s a jarring notion.
I’ve had
Sheldon Whitehouse, who’s from Rhode Island, a great member of the community
too, and he had a map that showed what would happen to his state; I mean
literally covered with water. And you
know we could try to build all kinds of flood walls, but we know; we’ve tried
that in other places and Mother Nature is hard.
Wouldn’t it
be better to step up to the plate and do what we’re trying to do? Just manage the carbon in the
atmosphere. Do it in a way that all the
studies show will create great jobs right here in America; stop sending a
billion dollars a day overseas. I mean
it’s just – it’s almost like if you got diagnosed with a disease and a doctor –
and you said oh, this is horrible; that the doctor said I have a cure for you
that will not only cure your disease, but it’ll make you ten years younger;
it’s great. I mean it’s a terrible
problem and an amazing opportunity and that’s how I see it.
SCULLY: Barbara Boxer, that has to be the last word;
the Chair of the Environment and Public Works Committee. Senator, thank you very much for joining us.
BOXER: Thanks.
Oh, appreciate it. Thank you
all.
SCULLY: We continue the conversation with Dina
Cappiello of the Associated Press and Juliet Eilperin of the Washington
Post. Let me begin with you. The Senate comes down to numbers. What did you learn?
EILPERIN: Well the fact that Senator Boxer has said
right now she can’t count to 60 is significant. You know of course people covering this are familiar that they’re
short those votes, but it really does matter, the fact that at this point, she
admitted that she – this is the first time she had introduced kind of a major
climate bill without a Republican co-sponsor and felt that this was something
that’s lacking. And so I think what it
shows is that they’re going to work very hard.
They have to win over a huge number of centrist Democrats, as well as
some Republicans if they’re going to get this passed.
SCULLY: How do they do that?
CAPPIELLO: It’s going to be tough. I mean there are leading placeholders in
this bill for a reason and that’s kind of saying to everybody out there, hey
you know all comers come and help us write this bill and work for your home
state industries. You may (ph) know
this is not just a Republican/Democrat issue.
Energy never is.
It’s a
regional issue and they’re going to have a hard time getting onboard some
Midwest Democrats that are heavily coal states, some southern people that are
worried about this. So they’re doing
that by not spelling it all out and they’re being very careful as to not kind
of spell out what they want explicitly in the bill.
You know she
said, on the big allocation issue, who’s going to get what and how they’re going
to get it. Are they going to buy
it? How much are they going to
buy? How much are they going to get for
free? She said hey, if Senator Baucus
in Finance wants to put something forward we’ll take it. So they’re being very flexible in the hopes
that this’ll be written by a bunch of people and, as a result, get the votes
they need.
SCULLY: She of course announced this last week with
Senator John Kerry, but in the conversation today, did she make news in terms
of the benchmarks, which she did not talk about last Wednesday?
EILPERIN: The fact that she said that 70 percent of
the allocations would go to consumers is a level of specificity that we didn’t
see before. And frankly, it shows that,
again, while initially both environmentalists and even President Obama, as a
candidate, had been calling for 100 percent auction of these allowances to
raise money; right now she’s making it clear that initially a huge amount of
the resources would be going to lower electricity bills.
CAPPIELLO: And I also think one thing that struck me is
the timing of all this. You know you
had last week, also, the EPA taking steps to regulate greenhouse gases. You have Copenhagen international talks in a
few weeks. And she says that there’s
going to be some kind of action in the Senate.
Well if comes out of committee that’s not going to be a huge shock. The committee’s probably going to pass this
bill. What the real fight’s going to be
is post-committee and getting enough votes to get it to the floor.
And so I’m
going to be curious to see, as we head into December and then into Denmark you
know how much of – how much committee action’s really going to count to say
that the U.S. is serious about this problem.
SCULLY: And let me conclude with that. How significant; how important are these
talks at the – in the Danish capitol?
What will come out of Copenhagen?
EILPERIN: They’re hugely important, because basically
it’s seeing whether you can get a global commitment from not only
industrialized countries, but major emerging economies, to curb big carbon
emissions. And while it’s not going to
be the endpoint, there very well could be kind of an informal political
agreement that would form the basis for a future legal agreement. It is a tremendously important psychological
and substantive deadline that the world is facing.
CAPPIELLO: And they’re also in a little bit of a
conundrum here; the administration and also lawmakers, because what we don’t
want to have happen is a repeat of Kyoto, where they went over, they signed on
to something, they came back, and the Senate said wait a minute. We don’t want to be told what to do. We want to – we want to write our own laws
and tell us what we’re going to cut here in the U.S. before the world tells us
what to do. So it’s – that yin and yang
here is going to be really interesting to see play out.
SCULLY: With that, thanks to both of you and thank
you for joining us on Newsmakers.