The Signal

Trump should keep his promise to cancel Obama climate deal

- Phil KERPEN Copyright 2017 Phil Kerpen. Distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. Kerpen is the president of American Commitment and the author of “Democracy Denied.” He can be reached at phil@americanco­mmitment.org.

One of the central themes of President Donald Trump’s campaign was the need to extricate the United States from internatio­nal agreements that hurt American jobs and unfairly disadvanta­ge American companies versus foreign competitor­s.

Another major theme was the promise to reverse Obama’s regulatory power grabs that dramatical­ly expanded government control over our lives without the approval of Congress.

Those two themes came together in a very concrete promise when Trump said: “We’re going to cancel the Paris Climate Agreement and stop all payments of U.S. tax dollars to U.N. global warming programs.”

So why hasn’t it happened yet? Public reports indicate there is an ongoing pitched battle between the president’s top advisers on whether he should keep his campaign promise or abandon it. And my own private sources in the administra­tion believe the promise-breakers may be gaining the upper hand.

Their argument is that America can remain in the agreement while revising its draconian emissions reduction goals in order to “keep a seat at the table.” Bad idea.

The Paris treaty effectivel­y bans coal-fired power plants in the United States while China has 368 coal plants under constructi­on and over 800 in the planning stage.

India’s coal production under the deal is allowed to double by 2020 – and they are likely to have emissions much higher than what they promised. Even Europe is allowed to build coal plants.

The agreement forces Americans to endure painful cuts while the rest of the world continues with business as usual.

Even worse, American taxpayers will be forced to cough up $100 billion in climate-related foreign aid by 2020, with the promise of much more to follow.

As Trump observed on the stump:

“President Obama entered the United States into the Paris Climate Accords – unilateral­ly, and without the permission of Congress. This agreement gives foreign bureaucrat­s control over how much energy we use right here in America.”

The idea that we could adjust how draconian the cuts are and remain in the agreement depends on a dicey matter of legal interpreta­tion.

Article 4.11 of the Paris treaty says “A party may at any time adjust its existing nationally determined contributi­on with a view to enhancing its level of ambition.”

Is easing off the energy rationing by allowing higher emissions enhancing ambition? Maybe, but I wouldn’t bet on it.

Moreover, with the EPA undertakin­g an effort to reverse Obama-era regulation­s designed to make electricit­y prices necessary skyrocket via draconian emissions cuts, accepting the validity of the Paris agreement will hand environmen­talist groups and state attorneys general a powerful weapon that could derail the entire deregulato­ry effort.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an, for instance, almost certainly has the issue fully briefed.

State Department lawyers insist these concerns can be ignored. White House Counsel Don McGahn reportedly disagrees and sees these as very real vulnerabil­ities – and who can doubt that the environmen­talists and liberal state AGs are likely to find the most antiTrump judges they can to see things their way?

Even if the agreement could be reconfigur­ed to lessen the burden of its cuts to American energy use, it would be a huge mistake to accept the legal legitimacy of Obama’s move to enter the United States into a treaty regime identical in form and structure to previous global warming treaties without the constituti­onally required advice and consent of the Senate.

President Trump should keep his campaign promise and cancel the Paris treaty.

Who can doubt that the environmen­talists and liberal state AGs are likely to find the most anti-Trump judges they can to see things their way?

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