,”
when, that is, the haze clears long enough so that you can actually
see the sun. Many days, you can’t even make out the next block.
Washington, by contrast, looks pretty clean: white marble monuments,
broad, tree-lined avenues, the beautiful, green spread of the Mall. But
its inhabitants -- at least those who vote in Congress -- can’t see
any more clearly than the smoke-shrouded residents of Beijing.
Tomgram: Bill McKibben, Chamber of Carbon
Consider it a tale of two speeches and a grim parable for our American moment.
On March 24, 2010, Treasury Department Deputy Secretary Neil Wolin arrived for his lunchtime speaking slot
at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's impressive headquarters, a short walk
from the Treasury building and the White House. When his time came,
Wolin strode onstage and, before hundreds of its members, tore into the chamber and its policies. As an organization, it was dishonest and "backward," he said. An ongoing three-million-dollar lobbying campaign was not intended to bolster badly needed financial reforms on Wall Street, as claimed, but "designed to defeat them."
A stunned audience mustered only the weakest of applause. At the
time, there was no love lost between the White House and the chamber.
Later that fall, with the help of a crucial Supreme Court decision, the
group would act on that animosity, spending a staggering $33 million in the 2010 midterms and ushering in the biggest Republican landslide in generations.
Fast forward to Barack Obama's address
to the chamber earlier this month. The president's appearance was cast
as an “olive branch,” an attempt to smooth over a tumultuous
relationship. It lived up to the billing. "I’m here in the interest of
being more neighborly,” Obama began.
“Maybe if we would have brought over a fruit cake when I first moved
in, we would have gotten off on a better foot. But I’m going to make up
for it.”
The toughest the president got was when he pled with the chamber's
corporate membership to "get in the game" and use trillions of dollars
of reserves piled up in the worst of times for American workers to
create much-needed jobs.
No one should be surprised that the Obama administration is now trying to buddy up with the chamber, not after the Democrats' historic "shellacking" last November and the president’s subsequent mad dash
to court corporate America big time. But make no mistake: Even were the
White House to get down on its proverbial knees and beg the chamber
for mercy, it would only embolden that organization when it comes to
its make-life-easy-for-monster-corporations positions on issues like
climate change (a figment of the liberal imagination), reforming Wall
Street (don’t even think about it), and limiting corporate campaign
spending (never!).
As TomDispatch regular, founder of the climate-change group 350.org, and author of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet
Bill McKibben writes, it'll take far more than a few weak-kneed elected
officials to push back against the chamber's ever-growing power,
money, and dominance on the American political scene. Andy Kroll
And if you had to pick a single “power plant” whose stack was spewing
out the most smoke? No question about it, that would be the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, whose headquarters are conveniently located
directly across the street from the White House. On its webpage, the
chamber
brags that it’s the biggest lobby in Washington, “consistently leading the pack in lobbying expenditures.”
The group spent as much as $33 million
trying to influence the midterm 2010 elections, and has announced that
it will beat that in 2012. That, of course, is its right, especially
now that the Supreme Court, in its Citizens United ruling, opened the floodgates for corporate speech (as in “money talks”).
But the chamber does what it does with a twist. It claims
to represent “three million businesses of all sizes, sectors, and
regions.” The organization, that is, seems to speak for a country full
of barbers and florists, car dealers, restaurant owners, and insurance
salesmen, not to mention the small entrepreneurs who make up local and
state chambers of commerce across the country.
At least when it comes to energy and climate, though, that claim is,
politely put, a fib. The Chamber of Commerce doesn’t have to say where
it gets its money, but last year a group called U.S. ChamberWatch
used one of the last disclosure laws still in existence to uncover a
single pertinent fact. They went to the headquarters of the chamber and
asked to see its IRS 990 form. It showed that 55% of its funding came
from just 16 companies, each of which gave more than a million dollars.
It doesn’t have to say which companies, but by their deeds shall you know them.
The chamber has long opposed
environmental standards. In the 1980s, it fought a ban on the dumping
of hazardous waste. In the 1990s, it fought smog and soot standards.
On climate change, though, it’s gone pretty near berserk.
In 2009, for instance, one of its officials even demanded
a “twenty-first century Scopes monkey trial” for global warming: “It
would be the science of climate change on trial,” the chamber’s senior
vice-president for environment, technology, and regulatory affairs
explained.
That didn’t go over so well. Several high-profile companies quit the
chamber. Apple Computer, the very exemplar of the universe of
cutting-edge technology, explained:
“We would prefer that the chamber take a more progressive stance on
this critical issue and play a constructive role in addressing the
climate crisis.”
Other businesses complained that they hadn’t been consulted. Some, like Nike,
quit the organization’s board. “We just weren’t clear in how decisions
on climate and energy were being made,” said a Nike spokesman.
One thing was for sure: they weren’t being made by three million small businesses -- because many local chambers of commerce started quitting
the chamber as well. From Florida and South Carolina to Missouri and
Kansas, from Colorado and Pennsylvania to New Hampshire and Washington,
dozens of local chambers have announced that the U.S. Chamber doesn’t
speak for them on these issues. In Largo, Florida, for instance, the
head of the local chamber explained
that the U.S. Chamber was composed, “for the most part, of political
action committees and business lobbyists. They hold little resemblance
to the local chambers of commerce that have been the cornerstone of
their communities for generations.”
Faced with that kind of incipient rebellion, the chamber backtracked
just a little, issuing a statement saying that they didn’t really want a
global warming version of a monkey trial after all, and that climate
change was an “important issue.” (The same statement went on to call for transforming the United States into the “Saudi Arabia of clean coal.”)
The happy talk in public, however, has done nothing to change the
agenda the chamber pushes so powerfully in private. The same year as
that statement, for instance, the organization petitioned the Environmental Protection Agency to take no action on global warming on the grounds that “populations can acclimatize to warmer climates via a range of range of behavioral, physiological, and technological adaptations.”
Now, read that again. No suggestion here that 16 dinosaur companies
adapt their business model to a reality that now includes melting ice
caps, desertification and massive flooding, ever fiercer storms
and acidifying oceans. Instead, they would prefer that every human
being (and every other species) be so kind as to adapt their behavior
and physiology to the needs of this tiny coterie of massive
contributors. Forever.
What’s become clear is that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, an
organization formed in 1912, more than a century after the first local
chamber came into being, is anything but a benign umbrella for American
small businesses. Quite the opposite: it’s a hard-edged ideological
shop. It was Glenn Beck, after all, who said
of the chamber that “they are us,” and urged his viewers to send them
money. (Beck personally contributed $10,000 of the $32 million he earned
in 2009.) The chamber’s chief lobbyist even called in to offer his
personal thanks. It shouldn’t have come as a great surprise: Beck’s Fox
News parent, Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, had given its own million-dollar donation to the chamber.
Thanks to the Supreme Court and its Citizens United
decision, there’s no way to keep the chamber and others from running
their shadowy election-time campaigns. As long as monster companies are
pumping money into their coffers, it’s “free speech” all the way and
they’ll simply keep on with their dodgy operations.
Still, the rest of us can stand up and be counted. We can tell the
Congressional representatives taking their money that they don’t speak
for us. We can urge more big companies to act like Apple and Microsoft,
which publicly denounced
the chamber. (It’s good to hear Levi Strauss, General Electric, and
Best Buy making similar noises.) We need to hear from more dissenting
chambers of commerce. It cheered me to find that the CEO of the Greater
New York Chamber said, “They don’t represent me,” or to discover that just a few weeks ago the Seattle chamber cut its ties.
But it’s even more important to hear from small businesspeople, the
very contingent the U.S. Chamber of Commerce draws on for its
credibility. Across America in the coming months, volunteers from the
climate change organization I helped to found, 350.org,
will be fanning out to canvass local businesses -- all those bakeries
and beauty salons, colleges and chiropractors, pharmacies and fitness
centers that belong to local chambers of commerce.
The volunteers will be asking for signatures on a statement
announcing that “the U.S. Chamber doesn’t speak for me,” and offering
businesspeople the chance to post videos expressing just how differently
they do think when it comes to global warming, energy, and the
environment. It’s a chance to emphasize that American business should be
about nimbleness, creativity, and adaptation -- that it’s prepared to
cope with changing circumstances, instead of using political cash to
ensure that yesterday’s technologies remain on artificial life support.
It’s easy to guess how the U.S. Chamber of Commerce will respond to
this campaign. Last week, a series of leaks showed that their law firm
had been carrying out extended negotiations with at least one “security firm” to collect intelligence
on the chamber’s adversaries, including the group that uncovered the
tax data showing where their money came from. Once the leak was made
public, the chamber’s law firm cut off the negotiations, but not before
they received “samples” of the kind of intelligence they presumably
wanted -- pictures of their opponents’ children, for instance, or the news that one foe attended a “Jewish church” near Washington.
For the record: I don’t like the chamber’s deceptions. I belong to
the Methodist church in my hometown. Keep away from my daughter.
With my colleagues at 350.org, I’ll do what I can to help undermine
the chamber's claim to represent American business. I don’t know if we
can win this fight against money pollution, but we’re going to do what
we can to clear the air.