NUMBERS GAME: How big is the U.S. Chamber of Commerce?

Apparently, the Chamber has been misrepresenting its membership numbers. The Chamber has been quoting that 3 million members are part of its organization. However, it appears the Chamber may have merely 300,000 members—perhaps even much less, due to the Chamber’s secrecy on its membership numbers. Of course, misrepresentation is a indication of one’s credibility. Consequently, why should businesses or the American public trust the Chamber? Many high profile businesses and utilities such as Apple, Exelon, PNM Resources, Pacific Gas and Electric, and Levi Strauss & Co have already departed the lobbying firm. Most recently, “political disagreements with the US Chamber of Commerce have prompted the San Francisco Chamber to drop out of a program that automatically enrolled many of its members in the national group.”

The Chamber has been lobbying aggressively against climate change legislation, even calling for a “public hearing on the scientific evidence for man-made climate change. . . . [or] ‘the Scopes monkey trial of the 21st Century.’” The Chamber’s misrepresentations are very relevant, since lobbying on the behalf of and consequently representing 3 million members certainly impacts how businesses and the public perceives efforts to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. The Chamber should be a leader in tackling climate change and energy issues—not advocating corporate interests. Certainly, the Chamber is nothing more but a wolf in sheep’s clothing. From Greenwire (emphasis added):

In an e-mail to E&E this morning, [Brad Peck, senior director for communication publishing at the U.S. Chamber] acknowledged, “This does often get reported in the press as 3 million members without the qualification. That is hardly our fault.”

Peck also argued that Mother Jones‘ reporting on the issue has crossed into advocacy and should be treated as such.

“Mother Jones believes that we should use the smaller number of 300,000 to indicate our direct membership. We are comfortable using the larger number for many concrete reasons,” Peck wrote.

Peck declined to provide a membership list for the chamber, saying it was policy not to disclose its associations with specific businesses unless they did it first.

.       .       .

But in the eyes of some environmentalists, the fight over the chamber’s membership strikes at the heart of the point that they have been trying to make in their attacks on the organization — that it does not represent the overwhelming majority of American mainstream businesses, but only a small number of powerful interests.

“They use the 3 million figure all the time, and if it’s false — and it certainly appears at best to be a misrepresentation — it raises another significant question about their credibility,” said Peter Altman, climate campaign director at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Historically, the U.S. Chamber has been perhaps the single most powerful lobbying source in Washington, and over the past decade, it has spent more on lobbying than any other organization, according to lobbying records. Indeed, many environmentalists and others have described it as the most influential force opposing the cap-and-trade legislation moving through Congress.

More from Mother Jones:

But Peck’s statement appears to be contradicted by a recent quote from the Chamber’s spokesman. “We have over 3 million members, and we don’t comment on the comings and goings of our membership,” spokesman Eric Wholschlegel told the New York Times last month in a story about the utility PG&E’s departure from the Chamber over its climate policy. The Chamber also does not cite the smaller membership number on its website or many (if not all) of its press releases. And its written materials typically do not explain the meaning of the “3 million” number, failing to use the term “federation members,” let alone clarify what it means.

In the E&E piece, the Chamber also lashed out at my reporting of the issue, saying that it “has crossed into advocacy and should be treated as such.” E&E published its piece a day after I sent an open letter to one of its reporters questioning his continued citation of the Chamber’s “3 million members.” If advocacy is the same thing as requesting that other media outlets report the facts, then I am guilty as charged. Or maybe Peck considers the choice of which number to use an ideological issue. If that’s the case, then E&E and the Associated Press are to the right of the Wall Street Journal, which reports the Chamber’s membership as 300,000.

Also, the Chamber is currently advocating failed ideas to solve America’s most pressing problems. From Politics Daily:

The Chamber will spend tens of millions of dollars and buy advertising nationwide to persuade the American public that its agenda — low taxes, open markets, and loose regulation — are crucial elements of a job recovery. The new television spots, previewed for staff and press at the launch event Wednesday, celebrate small American entrepreneurs and argue that government intervention will not spur permanent job growth.

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Fox News’s Shepard Smith vs. Senator John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) on the public option

Republican Senator John Barrasso argues that the public option would result in a government take over of healthcare. Senator Barrasso should have more faith in private health insurance providers. If government-run health care is so inferior, as Republicans claim, then why make the argument that a public option would threaten competition. It’s a ridiculous and vacant argument for Republicans to make.

Furthermore, Barrasso exclaimed, “We’re not even allowing the people of America to read the bill.” However, it’s Senator Barrasso’s responsibility to read the bill—it’s his job.

Senator Barrasso should be against the public option, because “the Wyoming senator has received a considerable amount of contributions from the health care industry: Over $500,000 from health professionals and nearly $100,000 from the pharmaceuticals and health products industry over his career and nearly $40,000 bundled from health care lobbyists in the last two years.”

via The Huffington Post

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CLIMATE CHANGE: Bill Maher slams unreasonable Republican climate change skeptics

Last night on his HBO show “Real Time with Bill Maher,” Maher had a message for climate change disbelievers. More specifically, Maher dismantled Republican Senator James Inhofe:

This man is the ranking Republican on the Environment Committee in Congress. He has no science background whatsoever, yet he’s gonna tell the hundreds of climate scientists assembled in Copenhagen—you know the people with the PhDs in the relevant fields—that they don’t know what they’re talking about. Education means nothing in America, because Mr. Inhofe is hardly alone, [since] three-quarters of the Republican Congress basically agrees with him, and they’re even pivoting from their old excuse of ‘global warming needs more study’ to . . . ‘it’s too late, might as well keep burning coal . . .[and] adapt’ . . .

Furthermore, Maher said, “These people are so stupid they make me question evolution.” The relevant portion is about 2:00 into the video.

via The Huffington Post

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HEALTH: Bill Clinton believes health care reform will happen

Obviously, former President Bill Clinton is a good communicator, and the former President believes that we’ll have health care reform this time:

Whether you have insurance or not, our current health care system is an appalling or nightmarish quagmire for many folks. It’s baffling that our access to healthcare is so strongly tied to employment and private corporations. These private corporations make huge profits from managing our health, and their policies haven’t reflected what’s in the best interest of the public. For example, according to Physicians for a National Health Program:

PacifiCare denied 40 percent of all California claims in the first six months of 2009. Cigna, which gained notoriety two years ago for denying a liver transplant to 17-year-old Nataline Sarkisyan of Northridge, Calif. and then reversing itself, tragically too late to save her life, was still rejecting one-third of all claims for the first half of 2009.

The profitable practice of rescission:

To add insult to injury:

Some of the known salaries are pretty big. Last year, the head of Cigna (CI, Fortune 500) made $11 million and the head of United Health Group (UNH, Fortune 500) made $9.4 million, according to the Corporate Library.

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CLIMATE CHANGE: Second Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Connecticut v. American Electric Power Company “game-changing”

The Second Circuit announced an important decision today that allowed several states and land trusts to continue their nuisance claim against various U.S. utilities over their release of carbon dioxide emissions, which contribute to climate change. From Reuters:

A U.S. Appeals Court reinstated on Monday a 2004 lawsuit by eight states and the city of New York against five of the largest U.S. utilities over their carbon dioxide emissions.

The lawsuit was dismissed in October 2005 by U.S. District Court Judge Loretta Preska, who said the issue was a political question for Congress or the President, not the judiciary.

Monday’s ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in New York said the judge “erred in dismissing two complaints on the ground that they presented non-justiciable political questions.”

The lawsuit against American Electric Power Co Inc, Southern Co, Xcel Energy Inc, Cinergy Corp and the Tennessee Valley Authority public power system, argued that greenhouse gas emissions from their plants were a public nuisance and would cause irreparable harm to property.

The utilities are five of the largest carbon dioxide emitters in the United States. Around 40 percent of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions come from fossil-fueled power plants.

The plaintiffs aren’t seeking money damages but injunctive relief. More on the plaintiff’s claims from Courthouse News Service:

Carbon dioxide acts as a greenhouse gas that traps heat in the earth’s atmosphere, causing the earth’s temperature to rise, the plaintiffs claimed. They asked the court to force the power companies to cap and then decrease emissions, warning that the earth’s temperature “will accelerate over the coming decades unless action is taken to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide.”

They filed suit under federal nuisance law or, alternatively, state nuisance law. The district court dismissed their actions as barred by the political question doctrine, explaining that the issue of global warming is best left to the political branches of government to resolve.

The plaintiffs launched a multipronged appeal, claiming that their cases aren’t barred by the political question doctrine; they have standing to sue; their federal nuisance claim was properly pleaded; and the Clean Air Act doesn’t displace that claim.

The power companies argued the opposite on each of these points and urged the Manhattan-based appeals court to back the lower court’s decision.

In a 139-page opinion, the court found that all of the plaintiffs have standing to challenge the alleged contributions to global warming, which the court characterized as “interference with a public right in protecting natural resources.”

And although the Clean Air Act addresses pollution and global climate change, the court ruled, the Environmental Protection Agency “does not currently regulate carbon dioxide under the (Act) – at least not in the sense that EPA requires control of such emissions at this time.” In other words, the EPA has only proposed regulation; it hasn’t imposed it.

Without specific regulation, the Clean Air Act and other federal laws “touching on” global warming don’t prevent the plaintiffs from suing under federal nuisance laws, the court concluded.

The judges also rejected the power companies’ claim that the lawsuit would undermine the nation’s global climate-change strategy. This claim “simply reiterates their political question argument and must be rejected for similar reasons,” Judge Hall wrote.

Finally, the court determined that the Tennessee Valley Authority isn’t immune from suit based on its status as a federally chartered agency.

“The flaw in TVA’s … argument is that TVA is not the United States or Congress,” Hall wrote, noting that the TVA has sided against the government “in a number of cases.”

The Second Circuit stressed that they’re not being asked to solve the problem of global warming where government has failed. From The Australian:

“A decision by a single federal court concerning a common law of nuisance cause of action, brought by domestic plaintiffs against domestic companies, does not establish a national or international emissions policy,” US Circuit Judge Peter W. Hall wrote.

“Nor could a court set across-the-board domestic emissions standards or require any unilateral, mandatory emissions reductions over entities not party to the suit.”

The cases were seeking to limit and ultimately reduce carbon emissions at six domestic coal-fired electricity plants, rather than ask the court to “fashion a comprehensive and far-reaching solution to global climate change,” Judge Hall wrote.

US District Judge Loretta Preska in Manhattan dismissed the cases in 2005, saying the question of whether carbon-dioxide emissions should be reduced laid with Congress, not the courts.

.       .       .

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said: “This ruling restoring our legal action breathes new life into our fight against greenhouse gas polluters and changes the legal landscape to impose responsibility where it belongs.

“Our legal fight is against power companies that emit a huge share of our nation’s CO2 contamination, but it will set a precedent for all who threaten our planet with such pernicious pollution.”

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said, “This is a game-changing decision for New York and other states, reaffirming our right to take direct action against global warming pollution from power plants.

“Today’s decision allows us to press this crucial case forward and address the dangers posed by these coal-burning power plants. My office will continue to be a leader in the fight to tackle the risks global warming poses to our environment, public health and economy.”

The cases were remanded to Judge Preska for further proceedings.

New US Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor was on the three-judge panel that heard arguments in the case in 2006. However, Justice Sotomayor wasn’t involved in the decision as a result of her elevation to the high court.

Representatives at AEP, Southern, Xcel and Duke said employees at their companies were still reviewing the decision and wouldn’t comment until they had had a chance to read the entire 139-page document.

A TVA spokeswoman said TVA had just received the decision and will review it in its entirety.

Another global warming case is a much watch. In Native Village of Kivalina v. Exxon Mobil, et al., a nusiance action was brought by an Alaskan village against oil companies. The villagers are seeking monitary damages.  According to Wikipedia, Native Village of Kivalina v. Exxon Mobil is “the first is to recover ‘monetary damages for defendants’ past and ongoing contributions to global warming’; the second, to recover ‘damages caused by certain defendants’ acts in furthering a conspiracy to suppress the awareness of the link between these emissions and global warming.’” More from National Underwriter Property And Casualty Insurance News:

Still, the Anderson Kill panel noted that one case worth watching is Native Village of Kivalina v. Exxon Mobil, et al., in which an Inuit village in Alaska has brought a nuisance suit in February 2008 against major oil companies.

The plaintiffs are seeking joint and several liability for nuisance and civil conspiracy, claiming that the oil companies’ contribution to global warming has caused melting ice which will lead to the eventual flooding of their village.

The case was brought in California. John Nevius, a shareholder in the New York office of Anderson Kill, said a motion to dismiss was filed in June 2008 in Virginia. He said the insurance company defending the suit has cited the pollution exclusion in its motion.

You can read the Second Circuit’s decision here.

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