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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsJoe Biden has endorsed the Green New Deal in all but name
On Tuesday, Joe Biden did something unprecedented for a Democratic candidate assured of nomination: he moved left. In a speech delivered from Wilmington in his home state of Delaware, Biden unveiled the most ambitious clean energy and environmental justice plans ever proposed by the nominee of a major American political party. The plans, which the Biden campaign described to reporters as the legislation he goes up to [Capitol Hill] immediately to get done, outline $2tn in investments in clean energy, jobs and infrastructure that would be carried out over the four years of his first term.
Forty percent of these investments would be directed to communities of color living on the toxic edge of the fossil fuel economy communities that have also been among the most devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. Biden proposes to pair these investments with new performance standards, most notably a clean electricity standard that would transition the United States to a carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035.
Part of Bidens Build Back Better agenda, these plans are a Green New Deal in all but name. If you set aside the most attention-grabbing left-wing programs included in New York Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezs 2019 Green New Deal resolution, like Medicare for All and a federal job guarantee, Bidens plans broadly align with an approach advocated by the left-wing of the Democratic party. Firstly, like the Green New Deal, Bidens plans reframe climate action as a jobs, infrastructure and clean energy stimulus.
After three decades of economic elites failing to pitch a carbon tax as a solution to the supposed market failure of greenhouse gas emissions, Biden has elected to focus instead on economy-wide performance standards as the cutting edge of decarbonization. And while earlier generations of Democrats wanted consumers to foot the bill for that clean energy transition at the gas pump, a position shared by Milton Friedman, Biden takes Keynes and Franklin Roosevelt as his intellectual and political forebears. Perhaps most encouragingly, Biden views the workers, unions and communities of color most impacted by the fossil fuel economy and the potential shift away from it as deserving special attention. In his view, climate action cannot be separated from economic, environmental and social justice.
https://amp.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jul/20/joe-biden-has-endorsed-the-green-new-deal-in-all-but-name
The article above is from today. The next article is a few months old but related.
Study: Biden can unite progressives and swing voters with a focus on climate
The environment is the biggest driver of doubts about Trump among his wavering supporters.
Most of the people who voted for Donald Trump in 2016 tell pollsters theyre firmly backing his reelection this fall. But elections are won by margins. And the relatively small number of Trump voters about 10 percent, according to the Cooperative Congressional Election Survey who say theyre at least considering casting a vote for the Democratic nominee are a critical slice of the population to understand.
And a new study, provided to Vox by Tufts University political scientists Brian Schaffner and Laurel Bliss and Data for Progress executive director Sean McElwee, argues that climate change could be the key for Democrats hoping to woo these voters.
This is a matter that should be of some concern to Joe Biden in particular, as the wavering Trump voters are disproportionately young and the youth vote has not exactly been Bidens strong suit. But while these voters take conservative positions on some issues, their ideas on climate are largely aligned with those of the Democratic Party base and with stances Biden himself has already taken.
Who the wavering Trump voters are
Trump voters whove lost confidence in the president are an electorally critical demographic, but its also a small group of people just around 10 percent of the approximately 46 percent of voters who pulled the lever for Trump in 2016. The CCES is an ideal tool to study those voters because its a large survey, with 19,000 responses, that can still generate statistically useful information about small sub-groups.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.vox.com/platform/amp/2020/4/2/21201825/biden-climate-swing-voters-progressives-2020-election