well suited for the job

Grass people invade Congress as Senate hearings wrap up 3

The third and final day of the hearings on the Kerry-Boxer climate bill wrapped up in the Senate Environment and Public Works committee today. We’ve been collecting the best reactions an d analysis on our aggregation page. Here’s a quick rundown of where things stand.

The wrap: Really, not much exciting news came out of the hearing. This was the big show enviros had been waiting for, but it’s largely just that: a show. Senators largely stuck to their scripts. For that matter, Dave’s summary of hearing day one more or less applied to the next two days.

The timing: The big question is when things happen next. Committee chair Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) told reporters she plans to begin the process of voting in committee next Tuesday. Republicans don’t like that idea; they want a lengthy EPA study first. If Boxer presses forward, Republicans’ only option for stopping her is refusing to show up—the majority needs two of the committees seven Republicans in attendance in order to establish a quorum for the markup. Riveting, isn’t it?

The Max Baucus factor: He’s still a problem. The Democrat from the coal-dependent Montana continues to demand more funding for so-called clean coal, Greenwire reports.

astroturf suitsThe grass never looked greener.Photo courtesy of Action Factor DCThe sideshow: The fun theatrics today took place over in the House, where Ed Markey (D-Mass.) led a fun little get-together with lobbyists working for the coal industry who sent fraudulent letters to Congress this summer, pretending to represent Hispanic, African-American, and senior groups.

Steve Miller, CEO of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, told the House panel that his group never opposed the House clean energy, a claim rather obviously contradicted by the group’s own press release.

Members of the Action Factory DC showed up in Astroturf-cover suits to join the fun—one even shook the hand of coal lobbyist Jack Bonner. Have a look:

Jonathan Hiskes is a Grist staff writer. He reports, tweets, eats, asks questions, self-promotes, looks out windows, and wonders if it could be like this.

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  1. Chris@CarrotsandSticks Posted 11:37 am
    30 Oct 2009

    During the Tuesday's EPW hearing with Steven Chu, Lisa Jackson, Ray LaHood, and crew not a single non-corporate lobbyist made it through the public line. One activist told me she thought 300 people were in the line.
    http://wp.me/pv6hY-lx

    We were talking with the EPW staff as the hearing was closing down they actually mentioned the Grass Suits squad being absent. Would have been nice they were there to ask Chu questions after the hearing.
  2. tboggia Posted 11:59 am
    30 Oct 2009

    Young people showed up full force at the hearings, wearing bright green shirts and green hard hats. Over 15 of us were there, holding signs saying "Trick or Treaty" and talking to Senators as they walked by.

    We even got a call-out by Sen. Merkley from Oregon who said that climate is always the top issue when he talks to college students.

    I wrote about it at the Campus Progress blog Funding our Future[http://fundingourfuture.campusprogress.org/2009/10/thoughts-and-background-on-the-first-climate-hearing/]

    cheers,

    Tommaso
  3. tboggia Posted 12:01 pm
    30 Oct 2009

    Young people showed up full force at the hearings, wearing bright green shirts and green hard hats. Over 15 of us were there, holding signs saying "Trick or Treaty" and talking to Senators as they walked by.

    We even got a call-out by Sen. Merkley from Oregon who said that climate is always the top issue when he talks to college students.

    I wrote about it at the Campus Progress blog Funding our Future[http://fundingourfuture.campusprogress.org/2009/10/thoughts-and-background-on-the-first-climate-hearing/]

    cheers,

    Tommaso

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