By Olivia Rosane, EcoWatch. Reposted with permission from EcoWatch.
As news outlets around the country reflect on Senator John McCain’s life and legacy following his death at 81 on Saturday, one strand that emerges is his attempts as a Senator to push bipartisan action onย climate change.
In early 2003, McCain joined with then-Democratic Senator Joe Lieberman to introduce theย Climate Stewardship Act, whichย The New York Times editorialย about his death called โthe first serious bipartisan bill to limit greenhouse gas emissions by putting a price onย carbon.โ
While the 2003 bill failed, and McCain stepped back from climate leadership during and after his 2008 bid for president, his earlier efforts still stand as a model for future legislative attempts to combat climateย change.
โLieberman and McCain were really good examples of a Democrat and Republican intentionally, consciously and thoughtfully trying to work across the aisle to build a 60-vote coalition in the Senate on climate,โย Natural Resources Defense Council Action Fundย Executive Director Kevin Curtis, who was an environmental lobbyist on Capitol Hill during the 2000s, toldย InsideClimateNews. โThe point of looking at McCain’s legacy, I think, is not to just look back to the ‘good old days,’ but to look at what we need to get backย to.โ
McCain first became interested in climate change during his 2000 primary bid for president, when student activists asked his campaign about its climate actionย plans.
In May 2000, he held the first of three Senate hearings on climate change he would convene that year, inviting scientists to testify about issues like melting ice-shelves inย Antarcticaย and the death ofย coral reefs.
โIt was an excellent hearing and I gained a lot of respect for John McCain at that time,โ hearing witness and seniorย National Center for Atmospheric Researchย scientist Kevin Trenberth told InsideClimateNews. โHe appeared to have an open mind on what the answers were and what to do aboutย it.โ
McCain was also willing to stand up to his party’s leadership in order to force a vote on his 2003 bill. Both he and Lieberman refused to support an energy bill Senate Majority Leader Republican Bill Frist and Senate Minority Leader Democrat Tom Daschle were trying to get passed until the Senate would allow a floor vote on their Climate Stewardship Act, which would have passed an economy-wide cap-and-trade program for carbon similar to the program in place for acidย rain.
Their bill ultimately failed, but the vote was important for signaling to activists where senators actually stood on climateย action.
โObviously, it hasn’t yet resulted in getting a comprehensive climate bill through Congress, but it’s a big issue, kind of like the civil right issue,โย Environmental Defense Fundย President Fred Krupp told InsideClimateNews. โWhen we do get there, [McCain] will go down in history as someone who started that progress in a forcefulย way.โ
In 2004, Lieberman and McCain introduced a reworked version of the bill, but it failed again in 2005 after increased lobbying by theย fossil fuelย industry.
While McCain never rejected climate science, he stepped away from leadership on the issue during his 2008 campaign, in which he came out in support of increasingย offshore oil drilling, and afterwards, when he faced a primary challenger for his Senate seat who criticized his former climate leadership and was funded by the group Citizens United, which had successfully sued to overturn important parts of his groundbreaking campaign finance reformย legislation.
โThere’s no sugar-coating the fact that he shelved his leadership role on climate for a while,โ Curtis told InsideClimateNews. โBut instead of blaming John McCain for walking away from an issue and not showing up, we should be saying ‘holy crap, something profound has happened with the Republicanย Party,’โ
McCain did get one more chance to stand up for the environment in a big way during the Trump administration, asย Environment & Energy Report pointed out.
In May 2017, he cast a surprise vote that secured the only defeat of an attempt by Republicans in the current session of Congress to repeal an Obama-eraย regulation
The bill in question would have used the Congressional Review Act to repeal an Obama-era regulation targetingย methaneย emissions, and McCain objected in part because the repeal would have stopped federal agencies from passing any similar rules in theย future.
โImproving the control of methane emissions is an important public health and air quality issue,โ McCain said in a statement at the time, according to Environment & Energyย Report.
Beyond climate change, McCain has also been praised by theย National Park Serviceย and theย Grand Canyon Associationย for his work preserving the iconic Arizona landmark and byย Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutionsย for his work to fund fish hatchery repairs near Hoover Dam and water conservation at Colorado River reservoirs, Environment & Energy reportย wrote.
Main image:ย Senator John McCain (R-AZ) andย Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) on a trip to Antarctica to meet with climate change researchers in 2006. Credit:ย Office of Senator Susan Collins, publicย domain
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