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 โ€œsocialistโ€ bill.

โ€œI donโ€™t blame Senate Democrats for trying to duck this big green bomb,โ€ Republican Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso said in a statement. โ€œYou canโ€™t escape the fact that nearly every Democrat senator running for president supports it.โ€

โ€œThe 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,โ€ Barrasso said.

Instead of demanding sweeping societal change, the Democratsโ€™ new resolution simply asserts climate change is real, primarily caused by human activity and that Congress โ€œshould take immediate actionโ€ 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 โ€œnet-zeroโ€ 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 โ€œsocialistโ€ pipedream. Environmentalists, on the other hand, are agitating Democrats to support the resolution.

Democrats considered voting โ€œpresentโ€ on the Green New Deal to shield members from whatโ€™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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