Archive for April, 2021

Despite Problems In the Past, Biden to Try Again with ‘Green’ Stimulus – The New York Times

WASHINGTON In September 2009, then-Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. traveled to a defunct General Motors plant near his hometown, Wilmington, Del., to announce a $528.7 million government loan for Fisker Automotive to make hybrid and electric vehicles.

The funding for Fisker, a small luxury automaker, came out of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, a $787 billion economic stimulus plan secured by President Barack Obama to lift the nation out of the Great Recession, in part by creating green jobs with $90 billion for wind and solar energy, a smart power grid, weatherized homes and the electric vehicle industry.

Fisker went bankrupt in 2013 before the Wilmington factory produced a single car. Mr. Biden also personally announced a $535 million loan guarantee for Solyndra, a California solar panel company that then went bankrupt, leaving taxpayers on the hook. An advanced battery maker called A123 Systems, which Mr. Obama extolled as part of a vanguard of a new American electric car industry, received a $249 million stimulus grant, then filed for bankruptcy in 2012, the vanguard that wasnt.

Now, 12 years later, President Biden is preparing the details of a new, vastly larger, economic stimulus plan that again would use government spending to unite the goals of fighting climate change and restoring the economy. While clean energy spending was just a fraction of the Obama stimulus, Mr. Biden wants to make it the centerpiece of his proposal for trillions of dollars, not billions, on government grants, loans, and tax incentives to spark renewable power, energy efficiency and electric car production.

But the failures of the Obama stimulus, and Mr. Bidens role in them he oversaw recovery-act spending could haunt the plan as it makes its way through Congress. The risk to taxpayers could be orders of magnitude more this time around, and Republicans for years have proven adept at citing Solyndra to criticize federal intervention in industrial planning.

Mr. Bidens advisers, many of whom worked on the Obama stimulus, say the situation is very different. The market demand for electric vehicles is much higher, and the cost of the cars much lower than in 2009, the year after Tesla Motors produced its first roadster. Solar power is more economically competitive. Wind is entrenched and expanding rapidly.

Jennifer Granholm, the energy secretary, will oversee the same clean energy loan program that backed Fisker and Solyndra. Ms. Granholm knows the program well: As governor of Michigan during the Obama years, she helped her state secure money from it to help auto battery manufacturers including some that failed.

You have to step up to the plate and take a swing in order to hit the ball, and sometimes you swing and you miss, she said of those failures. But if you never swing, you will never hit the ball, and youll never get a run. So the overall benefits of the Obama-era clean energy investments were overwhelmingly a net positive.

Still, she said her team was studying the lessons of 2009: When you invest in innovation sometimes it works and sometimes it doesnt. But you learn from the losses more often than you do from the wins, just like any human, right? She said that the clean energy loan program would be retooled and invigorated for its second round.

Other advisers to Mr. Obama concede they fell short, especially on electric cars. The recovery act was supposed to put a million plug-in hybrids on the road by 2015 but mustered fewer than 200,000. Even today, fewer than 1 percent of vehicles on the road are electric.

There was high ambition, but getting some of those projects off the drawing board and onto the ground was an area where it certainly proved to be a challenge, said Heather Zichal, who served as Mr. Obamas top clean energy and climate change adviser in his first term.

Republicans are already weaponizing the losses of the Obama green stimulus in their political attacks against the Biden plan.

When President Biden was vice president, the Obama administration promised thousands of green energy jobs, said Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming, the ranking Republican on the Senate Energy Committee. These jobs never materialized. Millions of taxpayer dollars were wasted on green energy companies that went belly up. Now, the Solyndra Syndrome has returned.

Most economists say that, on balance, the Obama green stimulus spending did lift the economy, and had a long-lasting impact. Clean energy spending created nearly a million jobs between 2013 and 2017, according to a 2020 paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research. It also made money for taxpayers: Despite the losses from companies like Fisker, the Energy Departments loan guarantee program ultimately made $2 billion more in returns than it paid out.

Wind power more than tripled in the last decade, and now generates nearly 8 percent of the nations electricity. Solar power, which generated less than 1 percent of the nations electricity in 2010, now generates about 2 percent, and is growing fast. Economists generally agree that the Obama stimulus, which pumped about $40 billion in loans and tax incentives to those industries, deserves partial credit.

But experts also point to a fundamental problem with throwing money at climate change: It is not a particularly effective way to lower emissions of planet-warming pollution. While the Obama green spending created new construction jobs in weatherization and helped turn a handful of boutique wind and solar companies into a thriving industry, U.S. emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases have stayed about the same, five billion tons a year since 2010, and are projected to continue at the same level for the coming decades, absent new policies to force reductions, such as taxes or regulations.

Mr. Obama had hoped to pair the recovery act money with a new law that would cap planet-warming emissions, but that effort died in Congress. His administration then enacted regulations on emissions, but they were blocked by the courts and rolled back by the Trump administration.

The recovery act was a success at creating jobs, but it did not meet emissions-cutting goals, said David Popp, a professor of public administration at Syracuse University and the lead author of the National Bureau of Economics study on the green stimulus money. And this new stimulus, on its own, will not be enough to reduce emissions.

Unless they can pair it with a policy that forces people to reduce emissions, a big spending bill doesnt have a big impact, Mr. Popp said.

But, he added, spending money is politically easier than passing policies to cut emissions. If that sets up the energy economy in a way that its eventually cheaper to reduce emissions, it could create more political support for doing that down the road by making legislation or regulations less painful, he said.

Mr. Biden has a long way to go on that front. Wind and solar power remain more expensive than fossil fuels in most parts of the country. While it gave a jolt to electric vehicle manufacturing, including a successful loan guarantee to Tesla, those cars still have higher price tags than the ones with old-fashioned internal combustion engines.

That is why Democrats say that one of the biggest lessons from the Obama stimulus is to go bigger much bigger.

The short-term tax credits for renewable energy and advanced battery plants werent big enough. They werent long enough, said Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which will play a key role in shaping Mr. Bidens bill in Congress.

If you were somebody who was very much committed in the area of clean manufacturing and energy, you didnt have an idea of what was coming next, he said.

Mr. Wyden has said he wants to use the Biden stimulus plan to create permanent tax credits that electric utilities could receive for generating zero-carbon electricity, regardless of the source.

Electric vehicles also present a challenge, even as companies like General Motors and Volkswagen promise to shift their fleets to electricity. With the current price of oil hovering around $65 per barrel, electric vehicle batteries would have to cost about $57 per kilowatt-hour of electricity to be cost-competitive down from their current cost of about $156 per kilowatt-hour, according to an analysis by Michael Greenstone, an economist at the University of Chicago who served as the chief economist for Mr. Obamas Council of Economic Advisers.

Electric vehicles are still far out of the money, said Mr. Greenstone. But a stimulus that was targeted at reducing the cost of these batteries absolutely could help.

Ms. Zichal, the former Obama climate adviser, who now works for the wind and solar lobby, said that this time around, electric vehicle battery technology is far more well developed than it was a decade ago. She compared the industrys readiness to leverage new government spending with that of the wind industry a decade ago when, she said, after years of stops and starts, it was at last at the cusp of a boom. It took wind power a while to get going, but in 2009 it was ready, she said, suggesting that electric vehicles could now be at the same inflection point, with some help from the federal government.

Mr. Bidens plan is expected to call for funding at least half a million electric vehicle charging stations.

One element of climate change spending in Mr. Bidens bill that was not in the Obama plan could draw bipartisan support: At his news conference last week, Mr. Biden spoke explicitly of the need to adapt the nations roads and bridges to a changing climate, which will bring stronger storms, higher floods and more intense heat and drought.

We cant build back to what they used to be, he said of the nations creaking infrastructure. The roads that used to be above the water level, didnt have to worry about where the drainage ditch was, now you got to rebuild them three feet higher. Because its not going to go back to what it was before; it will only get worse, unless we stop it.

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Despite Problems In the Past, Biden to Try Again with 'Green' Stimulus - The New York Times

Barack Obama Said That He Had Family Dinners Every Night at 6:30 While Serving as President – Yahoo Lifestyle

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 05: U.S. President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, and daughters Malia (L) and Sasha (R) pose for a family portrait with their pets Bo and Sunny in the Rose Garden of the White House on Easter Sunday, April 5, 2015 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Pete Souza/The White House via Getty Images)

In an episode of their shared podcast, Renegades: Born in the USA, Barack Obama spoke with Bruce Springsteen about his early days of parenthood and what having children has taught him. According to the former president - who met his wife, Michelle Obama, when they were in law school - having children was always a part of their long-term plan.

"We had this nice stretch of about three years where she was doing her thing in her career and I was doing mine," he told Bruce. "Then we started trying to have kids. Took a while. Michelle had a couple miscarriages and we had to kind of work at it. When Malia was finally born, we were more than ready to be parents, right? 'Cause there had been this six-year stretch in which probably for about half of it, we had been trying, so there was no surprise to it."

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He reflected on the time he first laid eyes on his oldest daughter, Malia, when she was born in 1998. "I had no doubt the minute I saw that little creature with those big eyes looking up at me, I said, 'My goodness. I will do anything for you.'"

Of course, Barack felt the very same magic when Sasha was born three years later. "The love of being a father was not something I had to work on," he said. "It was physical, it was emotional, spiritual, you know. The attachment to my children I felt entirely and completely. I thought to myself: 'OK. If the baseline is unconditional love, I've got that.'"

"The love of being a father was not something I had to work on."

Barack shared that he was more than happy to take the night shift when his kiddos were babies, alternating between feeding them, changing them, and talking to them. "This is one place where I do think the idea of what it means to be a man changed in a real way," he said. "By the time I had Malia, it wasn't just that I was completely absorbed and fascinated and in love with this bundle of joy, and this woman who had gone through everything to give me this joy. There was, I think, a sense that, 'Oh, dads should want to spend time with their kids and should want to burp 'em and change diapers.'"

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Barack shared that, because he and Michelle welcomed both of their daughters within three years, juggling fatherhood with his career was incredibly difficult at times, especially once he began his run for president.

"We have kids, and within the span of two or three years, I am suddenly being catapulted - I mean, look, Sasha was, when I ran for the US Senate, Sasha [was] only 3 years old," he said. "When I'm sworn in as a US senator, Sasha is 4 and Malia is 8. Something like that. Three years later, I'm president of the United States, and in the interim, for a year and a half I've been on the road. Not for three-week spans, but for big chunks of time."

He continued, noting how incredibly supportive Michelle was of his ambitions: "The first six months of me running for president, I was miserable because I was missing that family bad. And we got through that only by virtue of Michelle's heroic ability to manage everything back home and the incredible gift of my daughters loving their daddy anyway."

"Michelle figured out much earlier than I did that kids are like plants."

Oddly enough, he had more time for his girls once he was sworn into office. "What I didn't anticipate was the fact that I get to spend much more time with my kids once I'm president," he said. "Because now, I'm living above the store. I have a 30-second commute. And so I just set up a rule: I'm having dinner with my crew at 6:30 every night unless I'm traveling. But my travel schedule [was] very different [then] because people [came] to see you."

But it wasn't just dinner, Barack made sure he spent quality time with his girls after the meal. "I'm gonna be sitting there and I'm gonna be entirely absorbed with stories about the annoying boys and the weird teacher and the drama in the cafeteria, reading Harry Potter and tucking them in and listening to whatever music they're now listening to," he said.

Being able to spend time with his family was incredibly meaningful to Barack, as it helped him navigate the stress of his job. "That actually was my lifeline," he shared. "In an occupation in which I'm dealing daily with mayhem, chaos, crises, death, destruction, natural disasters, right? And so I always say that the degree to which Michelle and those girls sacrificed and lifted me up kept me going, prevented me from either getting cynical or despairing, reminded me why I was doing what I was doing, and spurred me on."

Toward the end of the conversation, Bruce asked what being a father has taught him. "Michelle figured out much earlier than I did that kids are like plants," Barack said. "They need sun, soil, water, but some of 'em are oaks, and some of 'em are pines, and some of 'em are willows, and some are bamboo."

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He shared that, like plants, kids need love and care to truly thrive. "Those seeds of who they are and the pace and ways in which they're gonna unfold are just uniquely theirs. I think I had a notion with Malia and Sasha, there was sort of a way of doing things - and what Michelle figured out earlier than I did, but I also ended up learning, was each one is just magical in their own ways. A branch is gonna sprout when it's gonna sprout. A flower's gonna pop when it's gonna pop. You just roll with that unfolding, that unfurling of who they are, being comfortable just discovering them as opposed to feeling as if it's a project."

Ultimately, Michelle and Barack set out to instill positive values in their daughters from the beginning. Things like, "We're not going to give you a hard time about making a mistake, but we will give you a hard time if you're lying about making a mistake, or if you mistreated somebody," he explained.

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Barack Obama Said That He Had Family Dinners Every Night at 6:30 While Serving as President - Yahoo Lifestyle

The Obama Presidential Center continues to follow thru with diversifying its construction workforce and ‘create a diverse pipeline of talent’ -…

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the Center designed by Tod Williams & Billie Tsien Architects in collaboration with Interactive Design Architects (IDEA) as Associate Architect. Image courtesy of Obama Foundation

With pre-construction underway, the Obama Presidential Center (OPC) announced more details of its construction costs and economic impact for Chicago.In February, the Obama Foundation shared that in addition to breaking ground in 2021, they expressed their commitment to providing subcontracting opportunities to a more diverse workforce.

"We believe the Obama Presidential Center should be built by a team that looks like the Center's surrounding community, and we're working hard to make sure that happens."

WBEZ Chicago's Natalie Moore reports on the Foundation's promise and provides more details on the Center's workforce initiative progress. OnMarch 10th, the Foundation statedworkforce goals would prioritize South and West Side residents. "The OPC Construction Workforce Initiative will create an inclusive construction workforce trained with skills to build the OPC, and create a diverse pipeline of talent that can be funneled to construction projects across the city."

Acknowledging their "ambitious goals," a designated jobs resource section of the Foundation's site provides ways individuals can explore how they can participate. The Foundation shares, "50 percent of our work will be done with minority-, women-, or veteran-owned businesses."

The OPC Construction Workforce Initiative builds off of the following three pillars:

Diversifying workforce goals also include recruiting women, young people, and the formerly incarcerated. Moore connected with Sharon Latson, program director at the Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters, Chicago Women in Trades (CWIT), who is partnering with the Obama Foundation on this effort. "This is definitely about the Obama Center at this time, but it's about how we can change the workforce and diversify it for people who have been locked out," shared Latson.

Community engagement to facilitate follow thru with this effort will consist of virtual job training across the South and West Sides in partnership with the CWIT andfour other organizations. Moore also connected with Chynna Hampton, director of workforce development at HIRE360, another organization collaborating with the Foundation. "I think the construction industry already is pushing toward that diversity initiative," shared Hampton, "but this sticks the pin in it to make sure we're pushing it forward and say it doesn't stop here."

The Obama Foundation announced Lakeside Alliance as general contractor for the project to ensure, "South Side, Black-owned construction firms profited directly from the project and were part of the decision-making team."

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The Obama Presidential Center continues to follow thru with diversifying its construction workforce and 'create a diverse pipeline of talent' -...

How a meeting for lunch led to legislation between a Texas Democrat and Republican – WFAA.com

Weve just really been working together, said Rep. Carl Sherman, D-DeSoto. "It was really just about hearing one another, and I think thats missing in politics.

DALLAS State Representative Carl Sherman, Sr. said he thinks politics are dangerously close to the point of no return, with lawmakers on different teams no longer trying to work together for a common good.

So, hes trying to pull politics back from the brink, one meal at a time.

The Dallas County Democrat contacted state Representative Matt Krause, R-Fort Worth, and asked him to start having breakfast and lunch together. The Dallas Morning News first reported the friendship that both men nurtured outside the House chamber.

Rep. Sherman said his colleague from across the ideological aisle was more than willing to sit down and get to know one another better. In fact, their friendship has led directly to co-authoring legislation.

Weve just really been working together, Rep. Sherman said on Sundays Inside Texas Politics. From a political perspective, we have joint authored two bills together and Im really excited about that. And that wasnt the aim. It was really just about hearing one another, and I think thats missing in politics.

One of those bills is House Bill 929, also known as The Botham Jean Act or Bos Law, recently introduced in the House.

I am extremely optimistic that the bill will pass, the Democrat said on the television program.

The bill number itself [929] is significant, Sherman explained, as it is actually Botham Jeans birthday.

The young accountant and worship leader was killed in his own home by former Dallas Police Officer Amber Guyger in September 2018.

Guyger claimed she thought she was entering her own apartment at the time when she shot him. She was convicted of murder in 2019 but is currently appealing the verdict.

Under Texas law, the Castle Doctrine allows someone to use deadly force to protect their home, car or business. Guyger's attorneys argued her actions should have been covered under it since she believed she was in her home.

Rep. Sherman said his legislation would strengthen and clarify the Castle Doctrine and make it an offense for police officers to turn off body cameras during an investigation.

It is important to me, it was also important to my joint authors like Matt Krause and Representative Jacey Jetton, both Republicans, that we ensure that law enforcement maintains the integrity that we should have and have the unedited, unredacted full investigation of what actually transpired.

That is critically important, Rep. Sherman said, to strengthening the bond between community and police.

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How a meeting for lunch led to legislation between a Texas Democrat and Republican - WFAA.com

With Joe Bidens own audacious New Deal, the democratic left rediscovers its soul – The Guardian

Its bold, yes, and we can get it done. So declared President Joe Biden launching his $2tn plan last week to overhaul US infrastructure ranging from fixing 20,000 miles of roads to remaking bridges, ports, water systems and the care economy, care now defined as part of the countrys infrastructure. Also included is a vast uplift in research spending on eliminating carbon emissions and on artificial intelligence. And up to another $2tn is to follow on childcare, education and healthcare, all hot on the heels of the $1.9tn American Rescue Plan, passed just three weeks ago.

Cumulatively, the scale is head-spinning. Historians and politicians are already comparing the ambition with Roosevelts New Deal or Lyndon Johnsons Great Society programme. In British terms, its as though an incoming Labour government pledged to spend 500bn over the next decade with a focus on left-behind Britain in all its manifestations real commitments to levelling up, racial equity, net zero and becoming a scientific superpower.

Mainstream and left-of-centre Democrats are as incredulous as they are joyful. Bernie Sanders, congratulating Biden, declared that the American Rescue Plan is the most significant legislation for working people that has been passed in decades. It was the moment when Democrats recovered their soul, writes Robert Kuttner, co-editor of the progressive magazine the American Prospect, ending a 45-year embrace of Wall Street neoliberalism. He concludes: I am not especially religious, but I am reminded of my favourite Jewish prayer, the Shehecheyanu, which gives thanks to the Almighty for allowing us to reach this day.

What amazes the party and commentators alike is why a 78-year-old moderate stalwart such as Biden has suddenly become so audacious. After all, he backed Bill Clintons Third Way and was a cheerleader for fiscal responsibility under both him and Barack Obama, when the stock of federal debt was two-thirds of what it is today.

Now, the debt is no longer to be a veto to delivering crucial economic and social aims. If Trump and the Republicans can disregard it in their quest to cut taxes for the super-rich, Democrats can disregard it to give every American child $3,000 a year.

It is not, in truth, a complete disregard. Under pressure from centrist Democrats, the infrastructure proposals over the next 15 years are to be paid for by tax rises, even if in the first stages they are financed by borrowing. Corporation tax will be raised progressively to 28%, a minimum tax is to be levied on all worldwide company profits, along with assaults on tax loopholes and tax havens.

If others have better ideas, says Biden, come forward, but there must be no additional taxing of individual Americans whose income is below $400,000 a year. Its an expansive definition of the middle class, witness to the breadth of the coalition he is building. But even these are tax hikes that Democrats would have shunned a decade ago.

It is high risk, especially given the wafer-thin majorities in both the House of Representatives and Senate. With implacable Republican opposition, it requires a united Democratic party, which Biden is orchestrating with some brilliance, his long years in Washington having taught him how to cut deals, when and with whom. He judiciously pays tribute to Sanders, on the left, for laying the foundations of the programme and flatters a conservative Democrat centrist such as West Virginias Joe Manchin, who insists on tax rises to pay for the infrastructure bill. What will be truly radical is getting the programme into law.

Yet, still: why, and why now? The answer is the man, the people round him, the gift of Donald Trump and, above all, the moment the challenge of recovering from Covid. Bidens roots are working class; beset by personal tragedies, charged by his Catholicism, his politics are driven by a profound empathy for the lot of ordinary people. He may have surrounded himself with superb economists the treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, Cecilia Rouse and Jared Bernstein at the Council of Economic Advisers, Brian Deese at the National Economic Council, Lina Khan at the Federal Trade Commission who are the intellectual driving forces, but he himself will have been influenced as much by the Catholic churchs increasingly radical social policy, represented by Pope Benedict XVIs revision of the famous encyclical Rerum Novarum.

What makes the politics work so well is Trumps legacy in uniting Democrats as never before while dividing Republicans. Biden knows the danger of the midterm elections in 2022, having seen his Democrat predecessors lose control of the Senate, House or both, so introducing gridlock. His bet is that his popular programme, proving that big government works for the mass of Americans, rather than wayward government by tweet, will keep divided Republicans at bay. Better that than betting, like Clinton and Obama, on the merits of fiscal responsibility, which Republicans, if they win power, will torch to serve their own constituency.

But the overriding driver is the pandemic and the way it has exposed the precariousness of many Americans lives. It has re-legitimised the very idea of government: it is government that has procured and delivered mass vaccination and government that is supporting the incomes of ordinary Americans. Unconstrained US capitalism has become too monopolistic; too keen on promoting fortunes for insiders; too neglectful of the interests, incomes and hopes of most of the people. An astute politician, Biden has read the runes and acted to launch a monumental reset. Expect more to come on trade, company and finance reform and the promotion of trade unions.

The chances are he will get his programmes through and they will substantially work. The lessons for the British left are clear. Left firebrands, however good their programmes, may appeal to the party faithful. But it takes a Biden to win elections and then deliver. With that lesson learned, we, too, may one day be able to invoke the Shehecheyanu.

Will Hutton is an Observer columnist

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With Joe Bidens own audacious New Deal, the democratic left rediscovers its soul - The Guardian