The United Auto Workers union expanded its strike Friday, bringing the number of employees who walked off the job to demand higher wages and better benefits from Detroitβs Big Three carmakers to 25,000. Republicans vying for the White House next year are using the moment as an opportunity to rail against President Joe Bidenβs climate policies.
βYesterday, Joe Biden came to Michigan to pose for photos at the picket line. But itβs his policies that sent Michigan autoworkers to the unemployment line,β former President Donald Trump, the GOP frontrunner, told a crowd of non-unionized autoworkers in Michigan on Wednesday. βHeβs selling you out to China, heβs selling you out to the environmental extremists and the radical left.βΒ
That message was parroted later that evening by his rivals at the second GOP presidential debate, which Trump skipped.
βItβs not climate change we need to worry about,β said North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum. βItβs the Biden climate policies.β
βOne of the signature accomplishments of our administration was in just a few short years we achieved energy independence,β former Vice President Mike Pence added. βBut on day one, Joe Biden declared a war on energy.β
As much of the world pivots at an unprecedented speed toward cleaner sources of transportation and energy to mitigate the worsening climate crisis, the United Auto Workers union strike has become the latest GOP culture war talking point and a new front line in the 2024 presidential race.
Itβs unclear if the GOPβs message is resonating with the striking autoworkers. Some have publicly expressed support for Trump and disdain for EVs. Union leadership, however, has made it clear that theyβre not buying it.
βI donβt think the man has any bit of care about what our workers stand for, what the working class stands for,β UAW President Shawn Fain said about Trump in an interview with CNN. βHe serves the billionaire class and thatβs whatβs wrong with this country.β
More than 10 million electric vehicles were sold worldwide last year, accounting for a record 14 percent of total new car sales, according to the International Energy Agency. And more than 670,000 hybrid and fully electric vehicles were sold in the United States alone during the first half of 2023. Global manufacturers of EVs and batteries have also been expanding their operations in the U.S., signaling what could become a new green energy hub in the American South.Β
Much of that growth, at least in the U.S., is being driven by the roughly $370 billion made available for clean energy and climate efforts from the Inflation Reduction Act, the Democratsβ sweeping spending package passed last year and Bidenβs signature accomplishment in the fight against global warming.Β
More recently, the law has fallen in the crosshairs of Republicans promising to put an end to βBidenomicsβ and βwoke finances.β GOP lawmakers, mostly following the lead of a small group of rightwing hardliners in the House, have tried several times this year to force spending cuts to IRA clean energy tax credits, including during the debt ceiling debate this spring and during the federal budget negotiations this summer.Β
That fight reignited this month, threatening to send the U.S. into a government shutdown over the weekend. If Congress canβt come up with a timely resolution, the consequences would go beyond federal employees missing their paychecks. Those hoping to buy a new home, for example, might be unable to obtain flood insurance if Congress doesnβt reauthorize the National Flood Insurance Program. And billions of dollars in federal disaster aid could be withheld from some of the communities hardest hit by climate change, including Puerto Rico.
On Thursday, Republican Sen. J.D. Vance from Ohio, introduced the latest GOP bill aimed at curbing Bidenβs climate agenda. Not only would Vanceβs bill eliminate federal tax credits for electric vehicles, but it would also establish a new $7,500 tax credit specifically for American-made gas-powered vehicles. βWe can secure a bright future for American autoworkers by passing this legislation and reversing the misguided policies of the Biden administration,β he said.
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Reaching Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Is Still Within Reach, Says IEA: Global greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise. But the path is still open to reach net-zero emissions by 2050 and limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, which scientists say is necessary to avoid the worst effects of climate change, Jeff Brady reports for NPR. Thatβs the message from the International Energy Agencyβs latest report, which found that the Paris Agreement goals can still be reached if nationβs curb fossil fuel production and triple renewable energy investments to $4.5 trillion a year by the early 2030s.
Todayβs Indicator
63,000
Thatβs how many deaths are expected to occur each year in the U.S. due to extreme heat if Earthβs average temperature rises 3Β°C by the end of the century, according to a new study. Scientists project the planet warming by at least 2.8Β°C if more isnβt done to bring down emissions.