President Joe Biden has for the moment forgotten, that when you can’t get enough food, or fuel prices quadrupled, or healthcare costs have skyrocketed because of government intervention, the last thing on your mind is some climate summit in a far away country that has no bearing on your life yet, your president is laughing and rubbing elbows with world leaders while ignoring the problems at home, you lose faith in your government. Biden seems more concerned with showing other world leaders he cares about the climate, than he does about not only the people at home, but his domestic agenda, the COP26 summit is a distraction for Biden, and he is playing is troubles at home off. The Associated Press has the story:
Biden has been determined to demonstrate to the world that the U.S. is back in the effort against global warming
GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) — President Joe Biden is joining other world leaders in highlighting the importance of preserving forests as a force against global warming, whipping up ambitions at a U.N. climate summit abroad even as a coal-state U.S. senator is again threatening Biden’s landmark climate legislation at home.
Comments by Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin that he still has doubts about Biden’s $1.75 trillion domestic policy proposal, which includes $555 billion in provisions to combat climate change, come at an unfortunate time for the president.
They landed as Biden and his aides are exhorting, coaxing, and deal-making with government heads for faster action on cutting climate-wrecking fossil fuel emissions at a summit with more than 100 other world leaders in Glasgow, Scotland, in its second day Tuesday.
Manchin holds a key vote in the Senate, where Biden has the slimmest of Democratic majorities, and he has successively killed off key parts of the administration’s climate proposals. He said Monday he was uncertain about the legislation’s impact on the economy and federal debt and was as “open to voting against” it as for it.
Biden has been determined to demonstrate to the world that the U.S. is back in the global effort against climate change, after his predecessor Donald Trump pulled the U.S. — the world’s largest economy and second-biggest climate polluter — out of the landmark 2015 Paris climate accord.
Putting the U.S. on the path to halve its own output of coal, oil and natural gas pollution by 2050, as his climate legislation seeks to do, “demonstrates to the world the United States is not only back at the table, it hopefully can lead by the power of our example,” Biden told delegates and observers on Monday.
“I know that hasn’t always been the case,” he added, in a reference to Trump.
Biden has essentially bet that the right mix of policies on climate change and the economy are not only good for the country but will help Democrats politically. But there are open questions about whether he has enough political capital at home to fully honor his promises to world leaders about shifting the U.S. toward renewable energy.
Gubernatorial elections on Tuesday in Virginia and New Jersey — states Biden won in last year’s election — will provide the first ballot-box test of how Americans view his presidency.
Biden joined other leaders Tuesday for an initiative to promote safeguarding the world’s forests, which pull vast amounts of carbon pollution from the air. As part of a broader international effort, the administration is attempting to halt natural forest loss by 2030 and intends to dedicate up to $9 billion of climate funding to the issue, pending congressional approval.
“Forests have the potential to reduce — reduce — carbon globally by more than one third,” Biden said.
After discussions on methane, infrastructure and technology, Biden will hold a final news conference before returning to Washington. Crucial for his time in Scotland is that he’s emphasizing several policies that can be achieved without approval from Congress, such as methane pledges and private partnerships.
Back home, his administration chose Tuesday to launch a wide-ranging plan to reduce methane emissions, targeting a potent greenhouse gas that contributes significantly to global warming.
Biden was upbeat Monday, smiling and back-patting with allied leaders — though briefly resting his eyes while in the audience for climate speeches. He came to the summit saying he hoped to see his legislation pass this week.
But the latest objections from Manchin threaten to close the narrow window Biden may have to pass his spending bill. The senator is eager to preserve his state’s declining coal industry despite coal’s falling competitiveness in U.S. energy markets.
If Biden’s climate legislation falters, he could be limited to regulatory projects on climate that could easily be overturned by the next U.S. president and turn his stirring cries for climate action abroad into wistful talk at home.
Manchin’s statements are a possible sign that one of two key Democratic votes in the Senate wants to delay any votes on the president’s agenda until the bill is fully vetted. But House Democrats are still taking steps this week to pass Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure package, which includes efforts to address climate change. The White House is seeking to turn both measures into law, linking them in hopes of appeasing a diverse and at times fractious Democratic caucus.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki issued a statement that the administration is confident the spending package already meets the criteria set by Manchin.
“It is fully paid for, will reduce the deficit, and brings down costs for health care, childcare, elder care, and housing,” Psaki said. “We remain confident that the plan will gain Senator Manchin’s support.”
Biden hinted at the challenge of trying to lead globally on climate at a time of political divisions at home. In seemingly impromptu comments on the Glasgow summit sidelines Monday, Biden referred to the collapse of U.S. climate efforts under Trump.
“I shouldn’t apologize, but I do apologize for the fact the United States, the last administration, pulled out of the Paris accords and put us sort of behind the eight ball a little bit,” he said.
By JOSH BOAK, ELLEN KNICKMEYER AND ZEKE MILLER
Matthew Daly in Washington contributed to this report.