Given the disastrous damage wrought by Hurricane Helene — a storm that rapidly grew to a Category 4 storm thanks to unusually warm water in the Gulf of Mexico — the issue of climate change was among the first topics broached during Tuesday eveningâ€
The answers given by Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) were effective at conveying the wide gulf between the parties on the subject. But they also highlighted the way in which the Republican position depends heavily on GOP opposition to clean energy a decade ago.
Vance was presented with the question first, asked how a second Donald Trump administration would try to address climate change. Vance began by recognizing the ongoing suffering in regions hit by Helene before acknowledging that climate change is “a very important issue� with a lot of people “worried about all these crazy weather patterns.�
He didnâ€
“I think itâ€
This is very much in keeping with Trumpâ€
Vance, though, then acknowledged the actual issue. Sort of. He suggested that it be stipulated, just for the sake of argument, that carbon-dioxide emissions are driving increased warming, which is a bit like stipulating that a dropped object will fall toward the Earth. (The CBS moderators would later note the scientific consensus on this point that Vance tried to present as contentious.) If that is the case, he said, what you would want to do is “reshore as much American manufacturing as possible. Youâ€
The policies of the Biden administration, he said, had instead resulted in “more energy production in China, more manufacturing overseas, more doing business in some of the dirtiest parts of the entire world.�
This is a variant of a common line of rhetoric on the right, one he made more explicit later.
“If youâ€
This is an argument, in short, for slowing the rollout of clean energy technology. But there is a big reason we donâ€
When Barack Obama won the 2008 election, he did so handily, promising a pivot away from the policies of President George W. Bush and a robust response to the still-unfolding economic crisis. That included a commitment to address climate change, at that point an issue that sat largely outside of partisan bickering. Former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R) lent his voice to taking steps to combat warming. Trump signed onto an ad in the New York Times that advocated the same.
During Obamaâ€
Obama had promised to invest heavily in Americaâ€
“Iâ€
His administration pressed forward in that direction. By 2012, though, as Obama was seeking reelection, this position had become a point of attack. The failure of the solar company Solyndra, a beneficiary of federal loan guarantees, was presented by Republicans as a demonstration of the flaws in investing in domestic green manufacturing. (The program in which Solyndra was participating went on to make money for the government.) Obamaâ€
“His plan is to let the oil companies write the energy policies,â€� Obama said of Romney during a debate that year. “So heâ€
“Because China, Germany, theyâ€
It was not entirely up to him, of course, and largely thanks to opposition from congressional Republicans, the United States ended up essentially ceding those industries to foreign competitors, including China. Meaning that Vance and other Republicans (such as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene [Ga.]) can now argue against the implementation of lower-emission technologies like electric vehicles by describing them as a boon for China. Meaning, too, that Vance can fume about how these industries should be domestic — exactly what Obama was advocating a decade ago.
In response to Vanceâ€
“We are seeing us becoming an energy superpower for the future,� he said, “not just the current.�
He also twisted the knife a bit, noting that Trump had in the past referred to climate change as a “hoaxâ€� and that Trump had welcomed oil industry executives to Mar-a-Lago, where he suggested that a $1 billion contribution to boost his campaign would result in a fossil-fuel-friendly president. Walz didnâ€
But, of course, the point isnâ€
Credit for the viability of those arguments can be given to the Republican Party of a decade ago.