The new Congress may be
the most boldly anti-science body since the time of the Scopes Monkey Trial.
The
114th Congress convenes this week. The last time a Congressional anti-science
caucus was this strong may have been during the Scopes Monkey Trial ninety
years ago. But that’s not the worst part of it: The folks who want to gut
government research and deny climate change are virtually guaranteed perpetual
re-election and jobs for life.
Let’s
get straight to the moral of this story: Entrenched anti-science isn’t going
away. Not soon, maybe not in our lifetimes. Every one of the most ardent
congressional climate deniers who chose to run won re-election, mostly by
runaway margins, and probably have jobs for as long as they want them. A
landscape of gerrymandered “safe” districts and wide-open campaign cash spigots
make their futures even safer, even as their behavior helps make our own a
little more bleak.
More
examples than you may care to know about
Chris
Stewart handily won a second term for his Utah congressional seat over a state
senator. As a freshman, he chaired the House Environmental Subcommittee. In
2013, he dismissed human-influenced climate change in the Salt Lake Tribune, citing
scientific uncertainty, “questionable” claims, and the motives of “radical
environmentalists” as drivers behind a dubious debate.
But Stewart’s 27-point win was a squeaker compared to his committee boss. Lamar Smithis a veteran congressman from San Antonio who ran the full House Science Committee for the last two years.
While Smith embraces the language of climate denial, his portfolio is wider than that. Otherwise a solid opponent of Big Government intervention, Smith has targeted about 40 National Science Foundation grants for congressional scrutiny.
Democrats couldn’t muster a candidate to run against him in November, and he swamped two third-party candidates by capturing over 70 percent of the vote. Smith’s Science Committee Vice Chair is Dana Rohrabacher of California. The veteran scientist-kicker romped by 29 points.
When it comes to sneering at science and cringing at climate claims, the Texas Congressional delegation is in a league of its own. Joe Barton, who famously issued an apology to BP after its 2010 oil spill, is pushing a bill to open up oil exports. He powered to a 25 percent win over his Democratic challenger.
Departing from Congress is Steve Stockman, the East Texas firebrand who failed to unseat John Cornyn in this spring’s Senate primary. Stockman turned up at the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit sporting a theatrical red blindfold, suggesting, I suppose, that climate action advocates were Blind Commies.
When it comes to sneering at science and cringing at climate claims, the Texas Congressional delegation is in a league of its own. Joe Barton, who famously issued an apology to BP after its 2010 oil spill, is pushing a bill to open up oil exports. He powered to a 25 percent win over his Democratic challenger.
Departing from Congress is Steve Stockman, the East Texas firebrand who failed to unseat John Cornyn in this spring’s Senate primary. Stockman turned up at the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit sporting a theatrical red blindfold, suggesting, I suppose, that climate action advocates were Blind Commies.
His
replacement is dentist Brian Babin, an enthusiast for both energy
independence and the Keystone XL pipeline. The Texas 36th district could
benefit mightily from approval of the Keystone, which would have a terminal
refinery in Port Arthur - a perfect spot to undercut energy independence by
exporting Keystone’s oil. Just like Joe Barton wants. Newly elected Rep. Babin
drilled Democratic opponent Michael Cole: 76 percent to 22 percent.
Just
north of Babin’s district is that of Louie Gohmert. Let’s just be nice and say
he may be the most colorful member of Congress, new inductees pending. Louie is
a staple of The Daily Show, and has warned that a loosely
patrolled border would lead to a brisk import trade in “terror babies.”
But for
Rep. Gohmert, “crackpot” is too polite a moniker. In October, he lashed out at
the Obama Administration, whom he characterized as so overwrought about climate change that they were
willingly allowing Ebola to eat us alive. A
month later, Gohmert beat his Democratic challenger by 55 points.
Then,
there’s the rookie field. New congressman Glenn Grothman may
have only won his Wisconsin seat by a relatively paltry 16 percent, but he’s
busting out of the gate on this “environment stuff,” including the War on Coal
and “global warming, which doesn’t exist anyway.”
"Rich countries solve their own problems"
In
Virginia, conservative college professor Dave Brat trounced another college
professor by 24 points after ousting House Majority Leader Eric Cantor in the
primary. Brat believes climate change isn’t a big deal because “rich countries solve
their own problems.”
Here
in Georgia, we’re losing an anti-science giant. In 2012, Paul Broun became a
viral video congressman when he told a small-town gathering that evolution was “lies straight from the pit of hell.” Like Stockman, Broun's leaving
because his Primary attempt for the Senate failed. That’s Paul Broun, physician,
by the way, so he couldn’t even take the trendy dodge that he’s not a
scientist.
Georgia
will not miss a beat; in fact, Broun’s replacement may well be an
anti-science upgrade. Jody Hice is a conservative radio talk
show host who doesn’t stop at denying climate change – he denies that
Islam is a religion, but acknowledges that it’s well on its way to overthrowing
America. Voters
rewarded him with a two-to-one margin of victory. I strongly suggest you keep regular track of his
congressional pronouncements by
watching the The Daily Show.
Grand
finale: Senator James Inhofe, the grandpappy of climate
denial, won
reelection by nearly forty points. He next runs, if he wants, in 2020, just
before his 86th birthday.
Martha Blackburn, the Tennessee congresswoman who waged war on energy-efficient lightbulbs,
unplugged her Democratic challenger by 44 points -- and in December, got a
rider attached to the huge Omnibus spending bill to block DOE's new lightbulb
efficiency standards.
John Shimkus of
Illinois, who
famously dismissed the possibility of climate change by quoting the Book of
Genesis on the House Floor, crushed an obscure Democrat by a three-to-one
margin.
Jason Chaffetz of
Utah, new chair of the Government Oversight Committee and a fifty-point victor
in November, will give the Benghazi treatment to EPA and other agencies via a
newly-created subcommittee.
Wyoming's Cynthia Lummis, freshly-reelected by a
three-to-one margin, will chair the new government entity responsible for
limiting government growth. Her pet cause during the last Congress was
dismantling the Endangered Species Act.
Defying
science, even in clumsy and ignorant ways, carries no political consequence for
many American officeholders. Until it does, the consequences are ours to own.
For
questions or feedback about this piece, contact Douglas Fischer at dfischer@ehn.org