The Guardian (USA)

If Biden isn’t willing to really fight the climate crisis, he shouldn’t run in 2024

- Daniel Sherrell

On Friday, 15 July, Joe Biden acknowledg­ed the death of his signature climate bill, conceding defeat in a war he never truly seemed willing to wage. He did it from a hastily prepared briefing room in Jeddah, where he had spent the previous day shilling for increased Saudi oil production.

It was painful to watch. The fossil fuel oligarchs had him right where they wanted him: his climate ambitions foiled, his rhetoric defanged, his hat in his hand. For their part, they had never been under any illusions that they were waging a war. Over the course of his presidency, they had deployed every weapon at their disposal to protect their profit margins from the public’s desire for a dignified life on a habitable planet.

Their final blow was delivered on Thursday by US senator Joe Manchin, puppet to the plutocrats, a man capable of patting his grandchild­ren on the head while selling their future to the highest bidder. With a fickleness bordering on sadism, Manchin killed our last chance at federal climate action for years, effectivel­y completing the corporate capture of our nation’s climate policy.

Biden’s failure to prevent this capture has confirmed, with almost eerie precision, the worries that dogged him on the campaign trail. That he was too milquetoas­t, too norm-bound, too nostalgic for the 1970s. Young people have waited in vain for the administra­tion to evince a fiery, existentia­l urgency around climate, a willingnes­s to start twisting arms and cracking skulls. But Biden has shown himself either unwilling or unable to don the same brass knuckles as his opponents. His latest defeat has affirmed what we’ve long feared: that he just isn’t the man for the moment.

There are still ways that he could flip this script. He could declare a climate emergency and leverage the Defense Production Act and the Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act to circumvent a Congress corrupted by corporate polluters. He could wage rhetorical and political war on Manchin, stripping him of his committee chairmansh­ip, and parading his naked corruption in front of the American people. He could appeal privately to Mitt Romney, perhaps the last Senate Republican with any integrity, who just last month bemoaned our nation’s lack of progress on climate. He could say the truth out loud, at the top of his lungs: that the fossil fuel industry has declared war on the American people. That we are fighting for the soul of our democracy and the future of our planet.

If he’s unwilling to do even that, he shouldn’t run for president in 2024. What young voter in their right mind would nominate him again? Why would we trust him to succeed without a congressio­nal majority when he’s failed so abjectly with one? His entire theory of governance will have been disproved: his “decades of experience”, his purported “knowledge of the Senate”, his reputation as a “deal maker” – if he couldn’t land a climate bill, what good were they?

Surrounded by a suffocatin­g gauze of Beltway consultant­s, he made mistake after mistake. He failed to use his bully pulpit to rally the public around the dangers of climate change. He almost never named – let alone declaimed – that those dangers were the direct result of burning oil, coal and natural gas. He held up executive climate regulation­s and approved fossil fuel projects, miscalcula­ting that it was carrots and not sticks that would win Manchin’s approval. Over the remonstrat­ions of the Squad, he decoupled his own climate agenda from Manchin’s beloved infrastruc­ture package, promising everyone that he could get Manchin’s vote on the former.

Was that a lie, or just deeply naive? I’ll still be agonizing over this question in 2024, when I pull the lever for his primary opponent.

I want to emphasize that Biden is not the villain here. It is Republican­s – and Joe Manchin – who are making the sociopathi­c choice to further enrich the already-super-rich at the expense of all life on earth. I have no doubt that Biden wants sincerely to address the climate crisis. But presidents are not judged on their intentions. They are judged on their results. And on climate especially, the results of the Biden administra­tion – of the entire, gerontocra­tic leadership of the Democratic party – have fallen dangerousl­y short of what’s needed.

With summer heatwaves intensifyi­ng and federal climate legislatio­n wilting, young people are rightfully desperate. There are only so many losses we will accept before taking our chances on a different formula: the charismati­c fire of an AOC, the crossover appeal of a John Fetterman, the judicious futurism of a Ro Khanna.

Joe Biden may be a “decent man”, as his defenders constantly contend. But what does my generation care about decency, when the planet’s going up in flames? If he really wants a second term in office, he should show us why he deserves one. He needs to realize he’s at war with the oligarchs. And then he needs to start winning.

Daniel Sherrell is the author of Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World (Penguin Books) and a climate activist

 ?? ?? ‘Biden had spent the previous day shilling for increased Saudi oil production.’ Photograph: Bandar Aljaloud/AP
‘Biden had spent the previous day shilling for increased Saudi oil production.’ Photograph: Bandar Aljaloud/AP

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