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How Green Was My Election?
Activists say environmental issues helped push
green candidates through tough races
By Amanda Griscom Little
09 Nov 2006
Fist-pumping, chest-thumping, and hallelujahs
abounded yesterday at a press conference of top environmental
strategists responding to the results of the Tuesday elections,
which ushered in a Democratic Congress after 12 years of near-total
GOP control.
Jon Tester, one of the greener senators-to-be.
"Let me be clear: The environment won last
night!" Sierra Club Political Director Cathy Duvall exclaimed.
"Voters elected a greener
U.S. House, a greener U.S. Senate, greener
U.S.
governors, and they gave a green light to
a new energy future."
Gene Karpinski, president of the League of Conservation Voters, told
Muckraker, "This is the first election I can remember in U.S.
history that has put such a specific focus on a top-priority
environmental issue, which this year has been a clean-energy
future."
There's no question that the environment played a central role in
some high-profile victories. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
-- one of the few Republicans with anything to smile about on
Tuesday -- got
a boost from signing into law the nation's
first mandatory caps on greenhouse-gas emissions -- and then coasted
to victory over Democratic challenger Phil Angelides. "There's
certainly a case to be made that he owes his win to climate
change," said John Passacantando, executive director of
Greenpeace USA.
Jerry McNerney -- he's greener too. Photo:
jerrymcnerney.org
Another Californian with decidedly less star power,
Jerry McNerney (D), also has the environment to thank for his
stunning victory over House Resources Committee Chair Richard
Pombo (R), who for 14 years represented
the Golden State's 11th Congressional District and rose to become
one of the most powerful Republicans in Congress. A no-name
wind-energy engineer, McNerney made clean energy his signature issue
and painted himself a zealous eco-warrior against the backdrop of
Pombo's relentless efforts to drill in sensitive natural areas,
butcher the Endangered Species Act, and open millions of acres of
public lands to development. McNerney was helped mightily along the
way by environmental groups, including the Sierra Club and Defenders
of Wildlife, which together poured more than $1.2 million into the
race.
The new Democratic senator-elect from Montana, Jon Tester, beat out
environmental foe Conrad Burns (R) with a similarly enthusiastic
environmental platform. An organic-farmer-turned-state-senator,
Tester centered much of his TV
advertising on his plans to make Montana a
stronghold of the new energy economy. As president of the Montana
state Senate, he pushed through a 2005 law requiring utilities in
his state to derive 15 percent of their electricity from renewables
by 2015.
This same message also cropped up during the campaign of Missouri's
new Democratic senator-elect, Claire McCaskill, who ousted
Republican Jim Talent, an avid proponent of oil extraction in the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. And it was a theme in the
gubernatorial races of Bill Ritter (D) in Colorado, who beat out his
drilling-happy Republican opponent Bob Beauprez, and Ted Strickland
(D) in Ohio, who walloped Republican Ken Blackwell with a campaign
that included a promise to spend roughly $250 million on next-gen
alternative-energy projects.
Of the nine candidates LCV named to its list
of "Environmental Champions",
eight were reelected. And of the 13 active candidates on LCV's "Dirty
Dozen" list (someone's got a bit of a
counting problem), "we beat nine of them," said LCV's
Karpinski.
Said Sierra Club's Duvall, "The striking thing isn't just that
the energy/environment issue played a decisive role in these races,
it's that it was used to bring an optimistic, inspirational message
to an election year marked by lots of negative campaigning."
Doubt, Doubt, Let It All Out
But some political analysts believe environmentalists
are going overboard with their optimistic claims of political
relevance. "I really don't think that energy or the environment
played a defining role in this election," Amy Walter, a senior
editor with the Cook Political Report, told Muckraker. "It was
ultimately a referendum on the president, the president's party, and
the president's war. It was a vote against the status quo
rather than a vote for certain future goals. Does it mean
that Democrats gave us a convincing blueprint for what they want to
do with energy? No. Does it mean voters were saying we see a bright
future in clean energy? No."
Ana
Unruh Cohen of the Center for American
Progress also thinks "it's a stretch to pin this election
directly on environmental issues."
Cohen noted, however, that one of the most common themes among
Democratic campaigns was eliminating subsidies for Big Oil.
"Democrats were looking to speak to middle-class voters, and
one of the best ways of spotlighting Republicans' favorable
treatment of the wealthy is tax cuts for the richest 1 percent of
America and oil subsidies for companies making record profits,"
she said. She also pointed to a recent Pew Research Center poll
that found voters connecting the dots between oil use and national
security; 67 percent said decreasing America's dependence on oil
from the Middle East is a very important step in preventing
terrorism. Said Cohen, "The environment was relevant in this
election to the extent that it is inextricably connected to the
issues that concerned voters most -- national security and the
economy."
Whether or not enviros can legitimately take credit for any outcomes
of the 2006 election, they have good reason to believe that the new
political landscape will offer them some victories going forward.
Soon-to-be Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has named energy
independence as one of her top
priorities for the 110th Congress, along
with repealing subsidies for oil companies and pushing energy
efficiency and alternative fuels. President Bush -- perhaps trying
to keep from getting steamrolled -- is now trying to seize
the initiative on energy independence
himself.
Says Karpinski, "Any way you slice it, we're looking at a
tremendous growth of power among environmentally sympathetic
leaders."
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material herein is distributed without profit or payment to
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research and educational purposes only. For more information go
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