CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CAP & TRADE SHOWS THE CALIFORNIA DIFFERENCE”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CAP & TRADE SHOWS THE CALIFORNIA DIFFERENCE”
No other state has a cap-and-trade
system anything like California’s for limiting and, in the long run, vastly
reducing production of greenhouse gases behind climate change.
In fact, the chairmen of every key
congressional committee and subcommittee on the environment where this issue is
heard are all long-term climate change deniers, best exemplified by Oklahoma’s
Republican Sen. James Inhofe, who once said his granddaughter was “brainwashed”
when she asked him about the issue. He heads the Senate’s Committee on
Environment and Public Works, a job once held by retired California Democrat
Barbara Boxer.
That’s just one way California is
different from most of the rest of America, especially the wide swath of “red”
states stretching from the Rocky Mountains east to the crest of the
Appalachians.
But the mid-July vote in which
California legislators overwhelmingly extended the cap-and-trade program until
at least 2030 exemplifies why almost one-third (32 percent) of Californians
said in a springtime poll that they’re at least somewhat interested in seceding
from the Union.
On
that issue, votes in both houses of the Legislature exceeded the two-thirds
supermajority needed to prevent threatened future lawsuits claiming
cap-and-trade is a tax, not a fee. It takes that large a margin to pass a new
tax, meaning this doesn’t happen very often.
But it did this time, and seven
Republicans who voted for the extension were critical to its getting 55 votes
in the Assembly, where 54 out of 80 were needed. There was also a single
Republican vote for cap-and-trade in the state Senate, where 27 of 40 votes
were needed and the extension actually got 28. The GOP votes were vital because
a few Assembly Democrats defected to the “no” side.
Those eight Republicans made up more
than 20 percent of the GOP’s legislative membership; a vote like that to fight
climate change could never draw nearly so much Republican support in any other
state these days.
But this is only one area where
California is vastly different from most of America. Some other fields where
polls and election results show most Californians want policies at variance
with those of the Trump Administration and much of Middle America: gun control,
sanctuary policies for at least some undocumented immigrants and strong voting
rights, to name just three.
In that light, some are seeing the
cap-and-trade vote as more than just an extension of a unique state policy.
They see it as something like the first salvo in their wished-for divorce
proceeding from the Union.
This is nowhere better expressed than
in an open-letter essay in the new journal Grizzly, published by the nascent
California National Party, whose purpose is a push for independence.
“You can do whatever you want,” the
essay says to the rest of America. “You want a country where everyone looks
like you? You can have it. You want a government that thinks like you? You can
have it. In California, we just had a Senate race where only Democrats ran.
You’ll have your own presidential races where the choice is between one
conservative Republican and another even more conservative Republican. Good for
you. You want no environmental restrictions? You can have it. We’ll shed a tear
when you start open-pit mining in Yellowstone, but we won’t do a thing to stop
you. You want to establish an Evangelical state religion? We won’t have any say
in what you do anymore.”
That’s putting it pretty strongly, but
it represents a little bit of the frustration some Californians felt when
several small states imposed their political will last year via the Electoral
College.
“Think about his for a minute,” the
essay continues, “You won’t have us always butting in with our political
correctness… And don’t worry about losing us. You don’t need us. You’ve got the
oil and the gas and the amber waves of grain. You can build pipelines…you can
drill offshore.”
That may be a very fanciful vision,
but there’s little doubt about how different California is from most of the
rest of America. The secessionists are merely saying they’d like to formalize
that reality.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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