The political theater of the U.S.
Congress lurched through yet another performance on March 26, as the
Senate decisively rejected a bill put forth by Republican Senator
Mitch McConnell that copied Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s and
Senator Ed Markey’s February non-binding resolution calling for a
Green New Deal. Forty-three Democrats, including all Democratic
presidential candidates in the Senate, voted “present” on the
measure—in effect, abstaining—while four Democrats crossed the
aisle and joined all 53 Republican Senators in voting against.
Democrats’ efforts to downplay
the vote as a bad-faith tactic on the part of the Republicans could
not cover up the fact that the tactic appears to have worked—the
Democratic Party’s lack of commitment to climate action was
revealed once again.
The premise of the Green New Deal
is that immediate, drastic, large-scale action is needed to address
climate change and its impending environmental and social
catastrophes. The Green New Deal’s proponents invoke the original
New Deal of the 1930s, which helped alleviate the Great Depression
until the U.S. entry into World War II ended it, as the model for a
massive state intervention to address social crises. The initiative
is being spearheaded by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and endorsed
by all the Democratic presidential frontrunner candidates.
The actual policy content of the
Green New Deal is still under development, but its broad outlines
were sketched in a resolution introduced in February by Ocasio-Cortez
and Sen. Ed Markey. The resolution established two interconnected
crises of climate change and economic inequality, and called for a
10-year national mobilization in order to address them. The
resolution laid out goals of overhauling the country’s
infrastructure and industry along sustainable lines, creating
millions of well-paying jobs, addressing systemic injustices against
marginalized communities, and securing access to clean air, water,
food, and nature for all citizens.
The resolution went on to outline a
series of projects that would achieve those goals, including a
federal jobs guarantee; full rights of workers to unionize and
collectively bargain; the decarbonization of industry, agriculture,
and transportation; just transition programs for workers in disrupted
industries; programs for universal healthcare, education, and
housing; and public financing and community wealth-building.
There is plenty to appreciate
within even this rough sketch of the Green New Deal’s proposals.
Revolutionary socialists support a rapid, thorough conversion to
green energy, green transportation, sustainable agriculture, and a
just, environmentally sustainable economy. To the credit of the Green
New Deal’s architects, many of its proposed programs fall squarely
within this paradigm and are of inarguable benefit to the working
class. However, there are critical differences between the solutions
favored by liberals and progressives (including the “Democratic
Socialist” wing of the Democratic Party), and those promoted by
revolutionary socialists.
At the heart of these differences
lies a difference in perspective on the nature of the crisis. The
Green New Deal’s “progressive” proponents point to “bad
actors” within an economic system that they consider otherwise
fundamentally sound, and endorse an electoral strategy through which
the Democratic Party can be won to a program that fundamentally
challenges capitalist profit prerogatives. They even claim that a
green sustainable future can be built without challenging
those prerogatives.
Revolutionary socialists, in
contrast, understand the problem to lie within the nature of
capitalism itself—particularly its imperatives of constant
expansion and the pursuit of profit over human needs. The system
cannot function without riding roughshod over social, political, and
environmental limits alike, and this tendency cannot be reformed
away. From the socialist perspective, therefore, a strategy that
relies on the pro-capitalist Democratic Party to implement an
anti-capitalist program is fundamentally flawed.
It cannot be emphasized enough that
climate change is a threat to the continuation of human civilization
and possibly the human species, and that action even more substantial
than the scale envisioned by the Green New Deal is needed for there
to be even a hope of survival. Today the ambient global temperature
stands at 1°C above the pre-industrial average—a seemingly
negligible increase that has nevertheless brought a host of
observable negative effects.
Seventeen of the 18 hottest years
on record have occurred since the year 2000. Storms, droughts, and
floods have increased in frequency and strength. Arctic sea ice loss
has destabilized the polar jet stream, causing the polar vortex
phenomenon that brought sub-Antarctic temperatures to parts of the
Midwest this past winter. Half the world’s coral reefs have died in
the last 30 years, due largely to rising ocean temperatures and
acidity levels. The UN Food & Agriculture Organization reports
billions of dollars in losses in the global agricultural industry due
to weather abnormalities, a figure that is rising exponentially. All
of these factors, and more, point to a planetary climate system that
has already been pushed to the brink.
The latest emerging climate science
gives us little cause for reassurance. The voluntary agreements
offered by the signatories of the 2015 Paris Agreement, even if
followed, put us on a track to 4-5°C of warming by the end of the
century. The environmental effects of this level of warming will be
catastrophic. Scenarios for these levels of warming already predict
the drowning of coastal areas and the displacement of millions who
inhabit them; the collapse of agriculture across Africa and the
American Midwest, and the extension of permanent drought across
densely inhabited areas such as southern Europe; and an 80-90%
reduction in the total human population as the ecosystems on which we
depend unravel under the pressures of rapid environmental change.
These realities, which are set to unfold over a matter of decades,
add up to an existential threat to human civilization that must be
confronted and addressed.
In the face of this emerging
reality, the two dominant bourgeois parties continue to choose petty
partisan theater over a committed, principled response. The March 26
Senate vote was a manifest example. Republican Senators stood by
their party’s stance of climate science denial and openly derided
the Green New Deal concept. McConnell himself called it a “far left
science fiction novel” while his colleague Mike Lee mocked the
proposal with images of tauntauns, Aquaman, and Ronald Reagan
wielding a machine gun while riding a dinosaur.
The Democrats, for their part,
could not bring themselves to show even symbolic support. This
bizarre failure to maintain a consistent position—especially on a
non-binding resolution with zero legislative consequences—should
raise serious alarms for anyone expecting the Democratic Party to be
the vehicle of salvation from climate catastrophe. How are we to
square the circle of a party that claims the Green New Deal as its
own yet fumbles the first opportunity to walk its own talk?
These postures, far from
demonstrating a strong position against their political opponents,
merely waste time and energy we can scarcely afford. Democratic
leaders criticized McConnell for attempting to “create division”
within the party, when in truth, he merely revealed divisions that
already exist between its nascent progressive wing and its entrenched
neoliberal leadership. They demonstrate the underlying schizophrenia
of the Democratic Party establishment—outward lip service to
climate action and social justice belied by thinly veiled loyalty to
capitalist prerogatives and an obsession with the electoral capture
of power.
The Green New Deal, especially in
its current developing form, will be a contested terrain where all of
the conflicting interests in society will clash. It will attract
those who genuinely understand the need for a deep reorganization of
society in order to survive the coming climate gauntlet. It will
attract those who prefer the Green New Deal as a cynical means to
channel environmentalists towards the ballot box. And it will be
opposed at every step by the forces of capital, which are hostile to
any challenge to their prerogative to amass wealth at the planet’s
expense.
The outcome of that clash—and the
capacity of the Green New Deal to deliver on its potential—will
depend fundamentally on the class nature of the struggle. Effective
climate action lies in the working class organizing in a powerful,
independent movement capable of asserting its own will—not in
hoping that bourgeois politicians will change their spots. The
salvation of humanity rests on the vast majority entering the
struggle with their own independent organizations and building a mass
power that cannot be denied.
>> The article above was written by Graham Rogers, and is reprinted from Socialist Action.
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