OK, maybe it’s a good thing that the morally-challenged senator is on the other side of the debate. He recently said:
My position is perfectly clear: a cap and trade system is obsolete in its approach to green house gas reductions, it has not worked, and I do not see it working.
Yes a very good position for a delayer, since a carbon tax is a political nonstarter (and dubious for other reasons), while a technology-only strategy can’t do the job.
This is not, however, an especially new position for the conservative senator. Back in 1998, he said:
As more and more American scientists review the available data on global warming, it is becoming increasingly clear that the vast majority believe the commitments for reduction of greenhouse gas emissions made by the administration in the Kyoto Protocol are an unnecessary response to an exaggerated threat the vice president himself [Al Gore] is caught up in making.
Craig isn’t going to win a Nobel prize for prognostication …
This post was created for ClimateProgress.org, a project of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.