Climate Crisis Gets Added Attention on Capitol Hill, Senate Action Underway

by admin on July 28, 2022

Senator Schumer is the Senate Majority Leader

In First-of-its-Kind Protest, Hill Staffers Arrested After Sit-in for Climate Action at Schumer’s Office

From an Article by Olivia Rosane, EcoWatch.com, July 28, 2022

Democratic leadership may have given up on passing major climate legislation, but their employees aren’t ready to throw in the towel. Six Congressional staffers were arrested Monday after a first-of-its-kind sit-in at Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer’s office demanding he give climate negotiations another try.

“Right now, we Hill staffers are peacefully protesting Dem leaders INSIDE,” Saul Levin, a policy adviser to congresswoman Cori Bush who was one of those arrested, wrote, as The Guardian reported. “To my knowledge, this has never been done.”

The protest comes at a crucial moment for climate action in the U.S. In late June, the Supreme Court ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could not restrict greenhouse gas emissions from power plants under the Clean Air Act without a new legislative mandate. Then, in mid-July, West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin told Schumer that he would not support the climate elements in an economic legislative package. All of this comes as a summer of extreme heat waves around the world makes the stakes of inaction blazingly clear.

“He’s giving up, but some of us are going to live through the climate crisis,” Levin said of Schumer, as NBC journalist Jules Jester reported on Twitter. When asked why the staffers targeted Schumer and not Manchin, Levin said it was the job of the Senate majority leader to whip votes.

“[T]ere’s always going to be a sheep that strays away from the herd. It’s the job of leadership to get the party together & actually pass what people need,” Levin said.

A total of 17 people participated in the sit-in, according to The Guardian. In addition to Levin, Axios reported that the other arrested staffers were ~

1. Aria Kovalovich, who works for Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.)
2. Emma Preston, who also works for Khanna
3. Rajiv Sicora, who works for Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.)
4. Courtney Koelbel, who works for Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.)
5. Philip Bennett, who works for Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.)

Bennett also serves as the President of the Congressional Workers Union, The Guardian reported. Levin tweeted that the six arestees were released Monday evening.

“We, Hill staff, did something outside the box because we need Schumer and Biden to do something outside the box,” he said. “We are acting on the emergency basis this moment requires in hopes they will too. We have no other choice, we’ve tried everything. We won’t give up.”

#######+++++++#######+++++++#######

SEE ALSO: Manchin says he is firm on closing tax loophole; Sinema absent from caucus meeting, Alexander Bolton, The Hill, July 28, 2022

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said Thursday he is standing firm on keeping a proposal to close the so-called carried interest tax loophole in the tax and climate deal he reached this week, despite potential opposition from fellow centrist Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.). Closing the tax loophole has long been a goal of Democratic tax reformers, but it was dropped out of the House tax bill last year after Sinema indicated she opposed ending the tax break.

Previous post:

Next post: