By JOHN M. BRODER
JASPER, Ind. — At a candidate forum here last week,
Representative Baron P. Hill, a threatened Democratic incumbent in a largely
conservative southern Indiana district, was endeavoring to explain his
unpopular vote for the House cap-and-trade energy bill.
It will create jobs in Indiana , reduce foreign oil imports and
address global warming, Mr. Hill said at a debate with Todd Young, a novice
Republican candidate who is supported by an array of Indiana Tea Party groups
and is a climate change skeptic.
“Climate change is real, and man is causing it,” Mr. Hill
said, echoing most climate scientists. “That is indisputable. And we have to do
something about it.”
A rain of boos showered Mr. Hill, including a hearty growl
from Norman Dennison, a 50-year-old electrician and founder of the Corydon Tea
Party.
“It’s a flat-out lie,” Mr. Dennison said in an interview
after the debate, adding that he had based his view on the preaching of Rush
Limbaugh and the teaching of Scripture. “I read my Bible,” Mr. Dennison said.
“He made this earth for us to utilize.”
Skepticism and outright denial of global warming are among
the articles of faith of the Tea Party movement, here in Indiana and across the country. For some, it
is a matter of religious conviction; for others, it is driven by distrust of
those they call the elites. And for others still, efforts to address climate
change are seen as a conspiracy to impose world government and a sweeping
redistribution of wealth. But all are wary of the Obama administration’s plans
to regulate carbon dioxide, a ubiquitous gas, which will require the expansion
of government authority into nearly every corner of the economy.
“This so-called climate science is just ridiculous,” said
Kelly Khuri, founder of the Clark County Tea Party Patriots. “I think it’s all
cyclical.”
“Carbon regulation, cap and trade, it’s all just a
money-control avenue,” Ms. Khuri added. “Some people say I’m extreme, but they
said the John Birch Society was extreme, too.”
Whatever the party composition of the next Congress, cap and
trade is likely dead for the foreseeable future. If dozens of new Republican
climate skeptics are swept into Congress, the prospects for assertive federal
action to control global warming gases, including regulation by the
Environmental Protection Agency, will grow dimmer than they already are.
Those who support the Tea Party movement are considerably
more dubious about the existence and effects of global warming than the
American public at large, according to a New York Times/CBS News Poll conducted
this month. The survey found that only 14 percent of Tea Party supporters said
that global warming is an environmental problem that is having an effect now,
while 49 percent of the rest of the public believes that it is. More than half
of Tea Party supporters said that global warming would have no serious effect
at any time in the future, while only 15 percent of other Americans share that
view, the poll found.
And 8 percent of Tea Party adherents volunteered that they
did not believe global warming exists at all, while only 1 percent of other
respondents agreed.
Those views in general align with those of the fossil fuel
industries, which have for decades waged a concerted campaign to raise doubts
about the science of global warming and to undermine policies devised to
address it.
They have created and lavishly financed institutes to
produce anti-global-warming studies, paid for rallies and Web sites to question
the science, and generated scores of economic analyses that purport to show
that policies to reduce emissions of climate-altering gases will have a
devastating effect on jobs and the overall economy.
Their views are spread by a number of widely followed
conservative opinion leaders, including Mr. Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity,
George Will and Sarah Palin, who oppose government programs to address climate
change and who question the credibility and motives of the scientists who have
raised alarms about it.
Groups that help support Tea Party candidates include
climate change skepticism in their core message. Americans for Prosperity, a
group founded and largely financed by oil industry interests, has sponsored
what it calls a Regulation Reality Tour to stir up opposition to climate change
legislation and federal regulation of carbon emissions. Its Tea Party talking
points describe a cap-and-trade system to reduce carbon emissions as “the
largest excise tax in history.”
FreedomWorks, another group supported by the oil industry,
helps organize Tea Party rallies and distributes fliers urging opposition to
federal climate policy, which it calls a “power grab.”
“Any effort to make electricity and fuel more expensive or
to cap or regulate CO2 will only exacerbate an already critical situation and
cause tremendous economic damage,” FreedomWorks says on its Web site.
The oil, coal and utility industries have collectively spent
$500 million just since the beginning of 2009 to lobby against legislation to
address climate change and to defeat candidates, like Mr. Hill, who support it,
according to a new analysis from the Center for American Progress Action Fund,
a left-leaning advocacy group in Washington .
Their message appears to have fallen on receptive ears. Of
the 20 Republican Senate candidates in contested races, 19 question the science
of global warming and oppose any comprehensive legislation to deal with it,
according to a National Journal survey.
The only exception is Mark Steven Kirk, the Republican
Senate nominee in Illinois , who was one of
only eight Republicans to vote for the House cap-and-trade bill sponsored by
Representatives Henry A. Waxman of California
and Edward J. Markey of Massachusetts ,
both Democrats. (One of the other Republican “yes” votes was cast by
Representative Michael N. Castle of Delaware, who blames that vote in part for
his primary election defeat by Christine O’Donnell, the Tea Party candidate and
a global warming skeptic.)
A large majority of Tea Party-supported House candidates
also doubt global warming science and oppose energy legislation designed to
address it.
Mr. Young, the Indiana Republican nominee trying to unseat
Mr. Hill for the Ninth Congressional District seat, strongly opposes cap and
trade and other unilateral measures to combat global warming. He says he is
uncertain what is causing the observed heating of the planet, adding that it
could be caused by sunspots or the normal cycles of nature.
“The science is not settled,” he said in an interview in his
headquarters in Bloomington ,
Ind. And he said that given the
scientific uncertainty, it was not wise to make major changes in the nation’s
energy economy to reduce carbon emissions.
A third candidate in the Indiana Congressional race, Greg
Knott, a libertarian, said he accepted the scientific consensus on climate
change but opposed a nationwide cap-and-trade system as the answer.
Lisa Deaton, a small-business owner in Columbus , Ind. ,
who started We the People Indiana, a Tea Party affiliate, is supporting Mr.
Young in part because of his stand against climate change legislation.
“They’re trying to use global warming against the people,”
Ms. Deaton said. “It takes away our liberty.”
“Being a strong Christian,” she added, “I cannot help but
believe the Lord placed a lot of minerals in our country and it’s not there to
destroy us.”
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