Home  
0
0

Contact Us

Feedback Form

About Us

Web Links

Visit this group

A Worker's Vignette – Suspended for Being Sick

Liner Notes to Das Kapital: Marx and Engels Comment

The People vs. the Insurance Monopoly: Fixing the Health System in 2009

Three Questions for Socialists

Barack Obama and the Contours of African American Social Protest Movements

“From Something Evil Good May Come”: Sojourner Truth and the Civil War

Greed as an Explanation of Crisis

Materialism and Feelings: Bringing Marx and Freud to the Same Table

Nine Point Five Theses: Discussion Points for a New Progressive Decade

Towards Peace, Democracy and National Reconciliation in Iraq

Building Bridges with Cuba

Communist Party Statement on Honduras Crisis

Book Review: The Voice of Hope

Book Review: Studs Terkel's Working: A Graphic Adaptation

DVD REVIEW: Fidel: Saul Landau's 1969 Film Reissued as a DVD

Tres preguntas para los socialistas

Story: Tim’s Journal, Part 1

Poetry July 2009

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2008 – online /July – August 2008 /July 21 - July 31, 2008 Print | Send to friend

Obama – The Greener Candidate



click here for related stories: environment/nature
7-27-08, 11:20 am

A recent commentary from The Environmental Magazine (E) describes presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama as the greener of the two candidates for president.

Asserting that global warming is the "most pressing environmental issue," the E commentary stated that the approaches of Obama and Republican John McCain to resolving the problem "differ in significant ways."

The life of the planet and of humans are at stake in the very near future because of the global climate crisis, putting this question, by necessity, at or near the top of any list of priorities for the country.

Additional resources:
Podcast #78 - Race and the 2008 Elections

In recent weeks, John McCain has attempted to appeal to moderate voters by talking about the issue, but has undermined his own positions by calling for new offshore and ANWR oil drilling, refusing to make caps on carbon emissions mandatory, and in his voluntary cap program, targets emissions cuts far below what scientists tell us are needed to turn the tide against climate change. McCain is also weak on promoting investment in safe renewable alternative energy resources.

Obama, according to the E article, proposes reducing greenhouse gas emission that cause global warming by 80 percent over the next four decades, using a mandatory cap and trade system. He has also proposed sizeable investments in alternative energy research and development, increasing fuel economy standards, and new mass transit.

The differences between the policies of the candidates is also reflected in their voting records.

Relying on voting statistics compiled by the League of Conservation Voters (LCV), E reports that McCain's voting record over his career stands at 24 percent, and zero for 2007. "McCain missed all 15 critical environmental votes last year." LCV characterized McCain's record and his stated positions as "outdated," and said that McCain "flip-flops on core environmental issues.”

The record shows that despite his recent statements, McCain is new to the environmental debate and has yet to use his leadership in the Republican Party and his Senate vote to commit to changing environmental policy.

By contrast, Obama has a lifetime score of 86 percent, and his 2006 score stood at 100 percent. He did miss four votes in 2007 due to campaigning, but by no means showed the systematic refusal to go on the record on the environment as McCain's voting record indicates.

The E Magazine article also pointed to differences between the two on nuclear energy. McCain, the article noted, wants to greatly expand the role of nuclear power in the economy, but has yet to address the urgent question of safety, health, and contamination.

Obama has indicated that safe nuclear energy should be part of the picture, but "would rather bolster alternative energy sources like wind and solar power that do not have the nasty side effect of radioactive waste in need of storage and disposal."

The E Magazine article further pointed to protection of water resources, wetlands, public land, and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, as well as a US commitment to including strong environmental standards in international trade agreements as key points on which the candidates differ.

--Reach Joel Wendland at jwendland@politicalaffairs.net

| | | Share on Facebook | Add to Mixx! | Save Page to del.icio.us | Twitter
 

Home Podcast Editors' Blog





blog comments powered by Disqus
Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


newcatcher@cpusa.org