Democrats Introduce Toned-Down Alternative To The Green New Deal

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WASHINGTON – Senate Democrats introduced a toned-down alternative to the Green New Deal as members stress over having to vote on the controversial resolution.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Delaware Sen. Tom Carper introduced a two-page alternative to the Green New Deal resolution Thursday that Republicans are calling a ploy to avoid voting on a “socialist” bill.

“I don’t blame Senate Democrats for trying to duck this big green bomb,” Republican Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso said in a statement. “You can’t escape the fact that nearly every Democrat senator running for president supports it.”

“The Senate will soon be voting on the Green New Deal, and Democrats will have the chance to vote for the radical policies they say they support,” Barrasso said.

Instead of demanding sweeping societal change, the Democrats’ new resolution simply asserts climate change is real, primarily caused by human activity and that Congress “should take immediate action” on it.

In contrast, the Green New Deal introduced by Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in early February calls for achieving “net-zero” greenhouse gas emissions within 10 years and a slew of social programs, ranging from universal health care to government job guarantees.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell plans on bringing the Green New Deal to a floor vote in the coming months, which has some Democrats worried. That concern has likely been amplified by a report estimating the Green New Deal could cost $93 trillion over a decade.

Senate Democrats struggled to figure out how to vote on the Green New Deal, which Republicans derided as a “socialist” pipedream. Environmentalists, on the other hand, are agitating Democrats to support the resolution.

Democrats considered voting “present” on the Green New Deal to shield members from what’s likely to be a controversial vote, and are pushing an alternate, watered-down resolution.

Schumer and Carper sent a letter to Republican colleagues Thursday asking them to co-sponsor the resolution. Schumer also took to the Senate floor Wednesday to challenge Republicans to come up with an alternative to the Green New Deal.

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