For decades liberals have gone to extraordinary lengths to impose new
energy taxes. They do not, to put it mildly, have the support of the
American people. So they have turned to increasingly complex schemes to
pretend the taxes they are advancing are not taxes. They’ve now
reached an unprecedented level of obfuscation: a federal regulatory
agency acting without Congress to coerce states into imposing
regulations that will bury cost increases in the electricity rate base –
and they might get away with it. Congress should therefore act
immediately to, if they can’t stop what is happening, at least require it to be transparent.
In 1993, Al Gore tried to impose a carbon tax directly. That didn’t go well, as he explained:
“I worked as vice president to enact a carbon tax. Clinton indulged me
against the advice of his economic team … One House of Congress passed
it, the other defeated it by one vote then watered it down and what
remained was a pitiful 5 cent per gallon gasoline tax. That contributed
to our losing Congress two years later to Newt Gingrich.”
Lesson learned? Not exactly. Enter cap-and-trade. The political
“innovation” of the cap-and-trade scheme is that instead of levying a
tax directly, it puts a cap on overall greenhouse gas emissions, and
establishes a market for companies to buy and sell the permits. The
overall effect is the same—if a company wants to emit more carbon
dioxide, it must pay more. So it’s a tax you can pretend is not a tax.
On April 17, 2009, MoveOn.org’s Adam Ruben said in a panicked email:
“If Republicans convince voters that clean energy legislation amounts
to a new tax, Obama’s plan is toast.”
He was right. Voters knew it was a tax and the plan was not only
toast, so was the Democratic majority in the House of Representatives.
The day after that 2010 shellacking, however, the president famously
said that cap-and-trade “was just one way of skinning the cat; it was
not the only way.”
Obama’s new approach to skin all of us energy-consuming cats is to
have the EPA pressure states to adopt draconian greenhouse gas
regulations, under the threat of losing their highway funds. One way
states can comply is to adopt precisely the cap-and-trade scheme the
American people already rejected. Regardless of how they comply,
if states play along, it means significant cost increases, which will
be passed on to customers in their energy bills.
This technique of dragooning the states has been condemned by the president’s own Harvard constitutional law professor, eminent liberal Lawrence Tribe who said: “Burning the Constitution should not become part of our national energy policy.”
A recent study by leading econometric firm NERA
found the most likely scenario would impose present-value costs of $479
billion, with $335 billion in higher electricity costs and $144
billion in higher natural gas costs. These costs will be buried in
utility bills; concealed from the public that won’t know why they are
paying more or that it traces back to political decisions made in
Washington.
Republicans in Congress are working hard to stop this entire scheme,
which is also being challenged in court. Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky is reaching out to states and encouraging them to
say no, and is also trying to prohibit the EPA from denying highway
funds to non-cooperative states. On the House side, another Kentuckian,
Energy and Power Subcommittee Chairman Ed Whitfield, has introduced legislation called the Ratepayer Protection Act
that would allow states to opt out, without penalty, if they determine
complying would have a significant adverse impact on ratepayers.
Great idea, but I would suggest a friendly amendment: if these rules
take effect, Congress should authorize utilities, notwithstanding any
other state or federal law, to itemize the compliance costs as a clearly
listed “climate change regulatory fee” on customer bills.
End the obfuscation and let us all see exactly how much the
president’s “clean power” plan costs. If liberals say no to that, they
might as well admit the whole point of this exercise is to hide a big
tax hike from the American people.
Phil Kerpen is head of American Commitment
and a leading free-market policy analyst and advocate in Washington.
Kerpen was the principal policy and legislative strategist at Americans
for Prosperity for over five years. He previously worked at the Free
Enterprise Fund, the Club for Growth, and the Cato Institute. Kerpen is
also a nationally syndicated columnist, chairman of the Internet
Freedom Coalition, and author of the 2011 book "Democracy Denied."
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