The Guardian (USA)

Climate advocates who backed Sinema exasperate­d by blocking of Biden bill

- Maanvi Singh

Wildfires, deadly heat, drought and flooding show how climate change has “already arrived” in Arizona and action is desperatel­y needed, according to climate and progressiv­e advocates who helped elect Kyrsten Sinema to represent the state in the Senate.

Many of them are wondering why their senator seems to have “turned her back” on her background in environmen­tal politics and is now blocking Democrats’ multitrill­ion-dollar legislatio­n to address climate change.

“The climate crisis is here – it has already arrived in Arizona,” said Vianey Olivarria, a director of Chispa Arizona, the state branch of the League of Conservati­on Voters, which had endorsed Sinema for senator. “We don’t have a lot of time to waste.”

Sinema is one of two centrist senators – with Joe Manchin of West Virginia – who have opposed the Biden administra­tion’s $3.5tn budget bill that contains the bulk of the Democrats’ climate change agenda.

This summer, the earth in parts of Arizona cracked – desiccated by decades of megadrough­t. But some communitie­s also flooded. Ferocious wildfires have eaten through half a million acres this year. And a prolonged, record-breaking heatwave – supercharg­ed by human-caused climate change – killed dozens in Phoenix and surroundin­g suburbs.

This week Sinema was back at the White House for private talks with Joe Biden on the legislatio­n, which would need the votes of all 50 Democratic senators to pass. It would enact dramatic cuts to greenhouse gas emissions, boost renewable energy programs and fund climate resiliency programs.

Sinema’s office has emphatical­ly contested New York Times reporting earlier this month that Sinema demanded $100bn in cuts specifical­ly to climate programs. But she has said little in public on her position and her obstructio­n of the reconcilia­tion package overall has confused, disappoint­ed and angered progressiv­e voters and climate activists in her home state.

Indeed, Sinema began her political career leading the Arizona Green party. Over the years, her politics shifted – and she positioned herself as a moderate Democrat willing and able to work with Republican­s that dominated state politics – but even then, she said she modeled herself after the late John McCain, the Republican senator of Arizona who pushed for bipartisan climate action throughout his career.

“When Senator Sinema ran for office, she promised to fight for climate change and invest in our communitie­s,” said Casey Clowes, an organizer with the Sunrise Movement in Tempe, Arizona. In 2018, Clowes said she voted for Sinema, and volunteere­d for more than 250 hours to help send Sinema – the first Arizona Democrat in 30 years – to the Senate. “Now she’s been unaccounta­ble and inaccessib­le,” Clowes said. “I think a lot of us are fed up.”

On Thursday, a group of veterans advising Sinema resigned, and accused her of hanging her constituen­ts “out to dry”.

Unlike Manchin, Sinema has not publicly voiced her concerns with the reconcilia­tion bill – aside from rejecting its overall price tag.

Manchin, a conservati­ve Democrat who has received more in political donations from the oil and gas industry than any other senator, has made clear that he objects to provisions that would slash planet-heating emissions. But Sinema – who has become infamous for evading questions from constituen­ts and journalist­s – recently told the Arizona Republic that she had “an interest in policies addressing climate change”, without offering much detail on which policies she was interested in. The senator has resisted raises to individual income and corporate tax rates to fund climate change and social safety net programs but hasn’t made clear what alternativ­e funding schemes she would support.

“Since she’s been in office, it’s been nearly impossible for community members to connect with her,” said Columba Sainz, a consultant with Moms Clean Air Force in Arizona. “We don’t know whether Sinema will protect us.”

Sainz, whose youngest daughter has wheezing episodes and respirator­y problems triggered by poor air quality, said: “In my family, heat is our enemy. It interacts with stagnant air to create and trap ozone pollution.” She works with other families who cannot afford air conditioni­ng during punishing heatwaves. The state recorded more than 500 heat-related deaths in 2020, which public health experts say is probably an undercount. In Maricopa county alone, officials tallied at least 113 heat-related deaths this year so far.

“We need funding for adapting to climate change,“said Gregg Garfin, a climatolog­ist at the University of Arizona. Several cities in Arizona, including Phoenix and Flagstaff, have already made climate change a priority, starting community programs to harvest rainwater amid drought or plant trees to shield poor, urban neighborho­ods from the punishing summer heat. “But addressing the crisis has been an unfunded mandate,” he said. “They need more investment.”

The budget bill endorsed by the majority of Democrats in Congress would finance a Green Bank to help communitie­s install solar panels and electric vehicle charging stations, and create a Civilian Climate Corps of young Americans to build climate-resilient infrastruc­ture.

Clowes, who has a chronic illness that makes her especially vulnerable to heatstroke, said Sinema’s resistance to legislatio­n that could help fund cooling centers and heat-defying infrastruc­ture, and bring down the emissions fueling extreme heat in the region, has left her angry. Along with other members of the Sunrise Movement, Clowes camped outside Sinema’s office in Phoenix this week. “It’s really painful to watch my home become uninhabita­ble,” she said. “And see Senator Sinema turn her back.”

 ?? Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA ?? Senator Kyrsten Sinema has proved elusive for constituen­ts. ‘We don’t know whether Sinema will protect us,’ one Arizonabas­ed campaigner said.
Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA Senator Kyrsten Sinema has proved elusive for constituen­ts. ‘We don’t know whether Sinema will protect us,’ one Arizonabas­ed campaigner said.
 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Senator Kyrsten Sinema has largely dodged questions about her position but her office denied a report that she had demanded $100bn in cuts specifical­ly to climate programs.
Photograph: Reuters Senator Kyrsten Sinema has largely dodged questions about her position but her office denied a report that she had demanded $100bn in cuts specifical­ly to climate programs.

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