John McCain, Still a GOP Maverick for the Environment?
By Dan Shapley
The Daily Green
September 5, 2008
McCain's green credentials
don't come from his overall voting record as a senator. After all, he
earned just 28% on the League of Conservation Voters' annual Scorecard
from 1999-2007, and his score was zero – yes, zero – during the early
months of his
campaign, when he missed votes on renewable energy tax rebates and
other key measures.
But McCain, after his
failed 2000 presidential bid, became a global warming champion, and
sponsored the Senate's first bipartisan carbon cap-and-trade regulation
that would have curtailed global warming pollution. That was in 2003.
That set him apart from
many of his Republican colleagues, and McCain highlighted his stance
early on in the presidential campaign as a way to burnish his maverick
reputation and distinguish himself from the unpopular President Bush.
But while McCain has
enjoyed a "halo hangover" for his efforts, most green analysts have
been disappointed with McCain the candidate, as he's hewed closer to
Republican orthodoxy to win over conservatives. With the exception of
Republicans for Environmental
Protection, which endorsed McCain early on in the primaries,
environmental groups that endorse candidates support the Obama-Biden
ticket. It's an open question whether his challenge to the GOP at the
nominating convention would translate into real effort to
oppose part orthodoxy on the environment.
A look at his stump speech
suggests otherwise. He has championed oil drilling and a dubious summer
gas tax holiday on the campaign trail, neither of which would – as he
claimed – have much of a lasting or significant effect on gasoline
prices. The core
of his energy policy is offshore oil drilling and the building of new
nuclear power plants to achieve independence from foreign oil. While
environmental voters have typically shied away from nuclear energy, the
threat of global warming has some reconsidering.
The focus on energy independence, however, often leaves global warming
out of the equation – since domestic coal and oil can contribute to an
energy independent nation but continue to fuel climate change.
If elected, McCain could
be expected to push for the offshore oil drilling and nuclear energy
initiatives he has focused his campaign around. He is known for working
across the aisle in the Senate, and he'd have to if he expects to get
anything done, since
Democrats are expected to maintain control of Congress.
A key question is how much
of a maverick McCain will be as a president. Will he make global
warming a priority, despite opposition from others in his party?

