Their mobs of lobbyists have been meeting weekly with a group of lawmakers to pressure them to weaken the climate investments in the bipartisan infrastructure package. So now we have the ExxonMobil plan.
Democratic members of Congress who were taking those meetings include Sens. Coons, Hassan, Kelly, Manchin, Sinema and Tester. Disappointing. And not the people-powered policymaking we expect.
The ExxonMobil plan helps ExxonMobil and leaves out critical investments President Biden outlined in his American Jobs & Families plan. But Biden’s plan should be the floor, not the ceiling, on what Congress delivers.
Congressional Progressives are leading the fight to ensure critical climate priorities are included in the reconciliation package. Without them #NoClimateCareJusticeNoDeal.
ExxonMobil has the money, but we have the people! Call your members of Congress to demand they support a recovery package with our key climate priorities: indivisible.org/demand-your-re…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
"No Democratic member of Congress conceived of this. It was absolutely conceived by the people, which is why we built it For the People. This came directly from what people have been telling us for years they want to see." - @RepSarbanes on the For the People Act
"You did not give up. You keep showing up and saying we can see the summit, don't tell us we can't get to the top of the mountain."
"Every Senate Democrat can feel history bearing down on them." - @RepSarbanes on the momentum behind the For the People Act
"It is up to us to make certain that last week's vote was not the end of our fight for the For the People Act, but rather the beginning of this next stage... Because despite what Mitch McConnell would have us believe, we know that now is not the moment to give up." - @RepMondaire
156 years ago today, slaves in Galveston, Texas heard this order, telling them they had been freed from bondage.
The infuriating irony of Junteenth is that, like the rest of Black liberation in this country, it should have come much sooner.
President Lincoln had signed the Emancipation Proclamation into law more than two and a half years before General Order Number 3 was released. Robert E. Lee had surrendered a month before. Lincoln -- the “executive” in the first line -- was already dead.
Two days ago, @POTUS signed a bill into law making Juneteenth a National Holiday. Black activists have been working for this for years: cnn.com/2021/06/16/us/…
Just nine days ago, Joe Manchin wrote an op-ed that said he’d “vote against” S.1, the For the People Act. A lot of talking heads wrote the bill’s obituary. But ORGANIZING WORKS. Activists in WV kept going, and now Manchin is back at the negotiating table. washingtonpost.com/politics/manch…
That’s an encouraging sign, but the devil’s in the details. We need to make sure that the For the People Act doesn’t get watered down. That means keeping in incredibly important, and incredibly popular, provisions like public financing and same-day voter registration.
Manchin’s proposal doesn’t mention those things, but we need a big bill to address big problems. And the For the People Act in its current form is really popular! We don’t need to take stuff out, especially not to try to win over Republicans. 👇
Expanding Medicare to include vision, dental, and hearing benefits -- as well as lowering the age of eligibility -- are wildly popular proposals among Democratic, Republican, and independent voters. 🧵
Senate and House Progressives have been working tirelessly to build up support from their Democratic colleagues by underscoring the immense need among aging adults in the U.S.: aarp.org/health/medicar…
House members successfully demonstrated an overwhelming majority support from the caucus in a letter to the Biden admin and Congressional leadership by garnering over 155 signatures: thehill.com/policy/healthc…
The House just passed @RepBarbaraLee's bill to repeal the 2002 Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) in Iraq, nearly two decades after it was put in place. This is a crucial step to #StopEndlessWar. motherjones.com/mojo-wire/2021…
This repeal is long past due. Presidents do not have the constitutional authority to unilaterally wage war, and we've seen the consequences of this unchecked military action - at steep financial, human, and moral cost.
Advocates and progressive champions in Congress have made repeated efforts to repeal the 2002 AUMF, but were stymied under both Republican and Democratic administrations. That work slowly built more support and now there is broad bipartisan consensus that we must #StopEndlessWar.
The American Renewable Energy Act introduced by @PeterWelch@RepYvetteClarke@RepBarragan@repcleaver & @RepSchakowsky establishes an ambitious renewable energy standard to drastically reduce emissions, decrease pollution, and promote community resiliency and energy democracy. 🧵
Let's take a closer look! The American Renewable Energy Act:
🌬️☀️ Prioritizes wind, solar, geothermal and other truly renewable energy sources!
⚡️ Requires 70% renewable electricity by 2030
🚫 Requires utilities to address existing pollution disparities in impacted communities
📈 Requires an increasing share of electricity generation through distributed renewable energy generation, such as rooftop solar
💰 Requires at least 50% of noncompliance payments be invested in renewable energy, energy efficiency, and storage projects in impacted communities