The Vine 'Climategate' Not Making Much Of A Splash In Congress
Bradford Plumer So are those leaked East Anglia e-mails having much
effect on the Senate climate debate? It doesn't seem so. Here's The
Hill's Ben Geman: Centrist Republican Sen. Susan Collins (Maine)
argues that the "climategate" e-mails should be probed on Capitol
Hill, but the e-mails haven't changed her views on global warming.
“There appears to be sufficient controversy and concern that I
think it warrants the Environment and Public Works Committee taking
a look at it,” said Collins, a swing vote in the looming Senate
fight on cap-and-trade, in the Capitol on Sunday. She told The Hill
that the e-mails, hacked from a British research institute, led her
to check in with two scientists at the University of Maine on the
matter. “They are disappointed at what appears may have happened,
but they tell me it does not change their own conclusions or their
own research,” she said. Collins still believes humans are causing
climate. And here's what Sheldon Whitehouse says about swing
Democrats: “I am not hearing anybody on our side, even the people
who are more economically concerned about the climate legislation
who come from coal states, that sort of thing, saying, 'What are we
going to say about this, is this a problem?’ ” said Whitehouse, a
member of the Environment and Public Works Committee who backs fast
action on mandatory emissions curbs. I'll add one more data point:
At a Senate energy committee hearing last week, Tennessee
Republican Bob Corker, who has suggested he might be amenable to a
carbon tax (if the proceeds were directly rebated to consumers),
raised the subject of the e-mails to the panel of experts, and they
all explained why various climate-science findings—particularly the
widely held judgment that humans are warming the planet—are robust,
depend on a wide array of evidence, and can't just fall apart
because of a few e-mails. (A bit more on that here.) Corker seemed
satisfied with that explanation and dropped the subject.
Granted,those Republicans who have always denied that humans are
warming the planet are going to keep insisting that this is the
scandal of the century—James Inhofe's all over this, naturally. And
he's in good company: At the Copenhagen talks this week, the Saudi
Arabia delegation has been arguing that the e-mails prove that
fossil fuels aren't responsible for global warming. No shock there.
But, for now, the e-mails don't appear to be actually changing
anyone's mind on the broader issue. More Articles On: Ben Gelman,
Bob Corker, James Inhofe, Maine, Senate, Sheldon Whitehouse, Susan
Collins, Tennessee, University of Maine