On the campaign trail President Trump came out against enacting a carbon tax. “I will not support or endorse a carbon tax!” he tweeted May 13, 2016. White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus previously said that Trump’s “default position” on climate change is that “most of it is a bunch of bunk.”
Priebus, National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn, Ivanka Trump, and her husband Jared Kushner, were supposed to meet with former Treasury Secretary James Baker and others. The pro-carbon tax group reportedly includes former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, former Walmart chairman Rob Walton, and New America Foundation founder Ted Halstead, but it was unclear at time of writing if they were expected to attend the meeting.
According to Moran,
The insiders would impose a $40 per ton tax on carbon, and potentially increase it in the future. Conservatives on Capitol Hill and Pennsylvania Avenue oppose a carbon tax. […] At $40 per ton of carbon, the plan would raise $300 billion in revenue, and add 36 cents per gallon to gas prices. James Baker has said that they would reallocate the funds in the form of rebates, a family of four would receive $2,000 a year.
James Baker is trying to sell the carbon tax as “something that does not increase, build government, that is conservative, that is free market.”
Some right-of-center groups in Washington like the R Street Institute support carbon taxes, as Michael Bastasch and Steven J. Allen reported in the August 2013 issue of Green Watch. A handful of scholars at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) appear to favor such taxes.
“Conservatives should seize the opportunity to once again emphasize the superiority of free markets over central planning,” R Street’s Andrew Moylan wrote in 2013. “A revenue-neutral carbon tax with regulatory reform could do exactly that.”
Marlo Lewis of the Competitive Enterprise Institute thinks a carbon tax would be disastrous.
The political choice facing the American people is in no small part that between a Republican Party that is anti-tax and pro-energy and a Democratic Party that is anti-energy and pro-tax. This clear product differentiation is an asset for the GOP. Republicans are truly the Dumb Party if they...Read More HERE
James Baker has said that they would reallocate the funds in the form of rebates, a family of four would receive $2,000 a year
ReplyDeleteSo... Just more wealth redistribution. Awesome. Old age is not killing these guys fast enough.
Both parties, probably based on fake environmental information, have been trying to get rid of manufacturing for decades now. Nixon, after all, was the REPUBLICAN who created the EPA. Right. Thing is, it's a small world. And we, at least, tried to keep it clean (before the EPA). When we send it abroad, it is without controls and is much worse.
ReplyDeleteThe the truth is, it's for cheap labor. Dems, Reps, eco-types, are all leftists of one sort or another. One is the crony capitalist type who doesn't care (look at any socialist/communist country eccology, burned). The other is the populist sort of socialist/communist, who wishes to engorge the wealthy so as to create a rift from whence to burn it down. It's... not that complicated.
We need a new sort of politics in America. Trump might be it.