The Pak Banker

Climate change rears its ugly head

- Brad Bannon

The good news was that President Biden reinstated the United States as a member in good standing with the rest of the world in the Paris Accords. The bad news was terrible. Climate change reared its ugly head when winter's wrath brought death and distress to Texas. The crisis exposed the tragic reality of climate change. Extreme winter weather created an overpoweri­ng demand on an outmoded energy grid. Friday Biden will be in the Lone Star state to witness the carnage from climate change.

Texans died while their governor lied. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said the breakdown of clean energy sources caused the outages. The main culprit, however, was failure of the natural gas system which is a major source of power in the state.

The weather in Texas was frightful but in Cancun, it was warm and delightful. In the middle of the devastatin­g climate crisis, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) fled while Texans froze. He traveled South of the border to Mexico while many Texans battled the elements without heat in their homes and with spoiled food in their refrigerat­ors.

His trip dramatized his indifferen­ce to his constituen­ts and to the climate threat that challenges the health, wealth and wellbeing of all Americans. Adding insult to the senator's self-inflicted injury, the sponsor of the Green New Deal and a frequent Cruz sparring partner, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y,) raised millions of dollars in relief for beleaguere­d Texans.

It's too early to tell whether or not Cruz's inattentio­n to the crisis will freeze his political ambitions when he's up for reelection or might run for president in 2024. But he could be cruising for a bruising in either case.

Meanwhile in Washington, D.C., it's clear sailing and blue skies so far for Biden. But he must navigate the rocky shoals obscured by dark clouds to move forward.

The early polling returns are encouragin­g. Biden's average approval score is 54 percent positive and only 38 percent negative. His performanc­e score is pure gold in a sharply divided nation. Most Americans are breathing a collective sigh of relief after four years of daily drama and trauma under President Trump.

In office only a month, the new president has been a warrior in the fight against the climate crisis. Not only did he rejoin the Paris Agreement, but he has issued executive orders to stop the Keystone Pipeline XL project and to scale back oil drilling on federal land in Alaska.

The new president has also installed two powerful officials, former Secretary of State John Kerry and former Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Gina McCarthy, as senior White House advisers to ensure that there is an environmen­tal advocate in debates on all federal policy. Once he's picked the low hanging fruit, Biden must start the heavy lifting. Now, he must make his own mark and move forward instead of simply reversing Trump actions. Advancing the environmen­tal action during his presidency starts with his $2 trillion Build Back America infrastruc­ture package, which he proposed last year during his presidenti­al campaign.

He has shied away from the Green New Deal label, but his proposal incorporat­es the general concept of radically changing the transporta­tion and energy systems to make them environmen­tally friendly and to create green jobs. Biden can probably pass the American Rescue Plan for pandemic and economic relief with Democratic votes in the Senate through the reconcilia­tion process. But then he will need 60 votes and GOP support to avoid a filibuster for his Build Back America plan.

Earlier this month, Biden invited a bipartisan group of senators to the White House to discuss the proposal. Spending a couple of trillion dollars after spending $1.9 trillion on pandemic relief will be a tough sell to Republican­s who have suddenly become born again fiscal conservati­ves after they helped Trump run up big budget deficits.

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