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- <text id=92TT2244>
- <title>
- Oct. 12, 1992: The Green Factor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Oct. 12, 1992 Perot:HE'S BACK!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 57
- The Green Factor
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Does protecting the planet destroy jobs? Bush says yes, Clinton
- says no, and their running mates fight it out on the stump
- </p>
- <p>By EUGENE LINDEN
- </p>
- <p> What happened to the "Environmental President"? In 1988
- Vice President Bush vowed to combat the greenhouse effect with
- the "White House effect," and mercilessly attacked Michael
- Dukakis for his failure to clean up Boston Harbor. But last
- June, President Bush played Scrooge at the Earth Summit in
- Brazil. In September he visited timber country in the Pacific
- Northwest, where he promised to lift a court-imposed injunction
- that has halted logging in federally owned ancient forests. His
- Interior Department is planning to open national forests to
- private strip mining. What happened between 1988 and 1992?
- Politics happened.
- </p>
- <p> While the Administration has not entirely abandoned its
- green appeal -- White House officials claim that Bush has done
- more for the environment than any other President since Teddy
- Roosevelt -- the re-election team is betting that U.S. voters
- will put their anxiety over the economy ahead of their worries
- about the planet. Thus the Bush campaign is attempting to paint
- Bill Clinton as a hostage to environmental extremists who would
- sacrifice American jobs to mollify the tree huggers. Point man
- in this assault: Vice President Dan Quayle. His main target:
- Clinton's running mate, Al Gore.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, for his part, is betting that concern for the
- environment is more than a fad. He has assigned Gore the mission
- of delivering the message that working to preserve the biosphere
- can create rather than cost jobs. Clinton and Gore contend that
- sound environmental policies can be an engine of growth that
- will help the American economy compete with Germany and Japan
- in the 1990s.
- </p>
- <p> The different ways the two camps use environmental issues
- reflect their divergent visions about the forces that will shape
- America's future. The Democrats argue that environmental
- decisions should be an integral part of economic planning. The
- Republicans seem to be saying the country should address
- environmental problems only when it can afford to. Nowhere do
- these differences emerge more sharply than in the attitudes of
- the vice-presidential contenders.
- </p>
- <p> Senator Gore, who led the congressional delegation that
- attended the Earth Summit in Rio, is the Senate's most committed
- and knowledgeable environmentalist. Last spring Houghton
- Mifflin published Gore's best-selling Earth in the Balance:
- Ecology and the Human Spirit, a call for Americans to take
- urgent action in the face of a global ecological crisis.
- </p>
- <p> Vice President Quayle, by contrast, argues that existing
- programs to improve the environment are more than adequate, that
- the state of America's air, water and forests is getting
- better, and that further improvements will come at the expense
- of jobs. Quayle plays a major policymaking role in this area as
- chairman of the President's Council on Competitiveness, an
- eight-member panel that, in the name of reducing government
- impediments to business, has worked to loosen environmental
- regulations on everything from wetlands to air pollution. The
- council was influential in persuading President Bush, virtually
- alone among world leaders, not to sign a treaty to protect
- endangered species at the Rio conference. The Administration's
- argument: that the treaty would harm the U.S. biotechnology
- industry.
- </p>
- <p> In taking aim at the Democrats' environmental policies,
- Quayle ridicules Gore's book as "their manifesto." As described
- by the Vice President, Earth in the Balance is a collection of
- lunatic proposals that calls for a $100 billion giveaway to the
- Third World, recommends new taxes that would put millions out
- of work, compares capitalists to Nazis and calls for the
- elimination of the internal-combustion engine. "It's all pretty
- bizarre stuff," said Quayle in a speech in Grand Rapids,
- Michigan, last August. "This is a view detached from reality and
- devoid of common sense."
- </p>
- <p> In his book, Gore does call for new taxes -- but only to
- replace old ones. The idea is to tax ordinary workers less while
- making polluting industries pay the true costs of their
- activities. The $100 billion figure is not a suggested giveaway
- but merely a computation of what the post-World War II Marshall
- Plan to reconstruct Europe would cost in today's dollars. The
- reference to Nazis is a greatly stretched interpretation of
- Gore's comment in the book that the failure in the past to heed
- the distress signals coming from the planet is analogous to the
- failure of the outside world to realize the seriousness of the
- German threat after Nazis destroyed Jewish homes and synagogues
- during the Kristallnacht rampage in 1936.
- </p>
- <p> Gore also argues that during the next 25 years the U.S.
- should develop a more efficient alternative to the
- internal-combustion engine. It is hard to see why this is any
- more bizarre than sanctifying a 19th century technology as the
- core of American prosperity. "If Bush and Quayle want to pretend
- that 25 years from now our global competitors will be using the
- same technology on automobile engines that we are using today,
- they are kidding themselves," says Gore.
- </p>
- <p> In Grand Rapids, Quayle attacked Gore for supporting
- congressional efforts to raise average fuel economy from 27 to
- 40 m.p.g., a move, Quayle argued, that would cost 300,000 jobs
- nationwide. This figure, taken from a study by the Motor Vehicle
- Manufacturers Association, is based on the unrealistic
- assumption that everyone now making a car that gets less than
- 40 m.p.g. would be put out of work. In contrast, a study to be
- released this week by the American Council for an
- Energy-Efficient Economy contends that improving fuel economy
- to 40 m.p.g. would lead to a net gain of 70,000 jobs by the year
- 2000. Howard Geller, executive director of the council, says
- fuel economy creates jobs by spurring the development of
- efficient new technologies for automobiles and putting money
- from gasoline savings into the hands of consumers. These gains,
- adds Geller, will more than offset job losses in the oil
- business.
- </p>
- <p> Gore says the jobs-vs.-environment argument is based on
- the same flawed logic that caused American businesses to
- disregard business guru W. Edwards Deming's seminal ideas on
- quality in past decades. "American manufacturers assumed that
- market forces had already perfectly balanced quality against
- cost and that any improvements would hurt the bottom line," says
- Gore. "Deming took his ideas to the Japanese, who proved that
- you could simultaneously improve quality and profits and
- proceeded to steal markets from American companies." Gore argues
- that Bush is now making the same mistake with pollution. The
- Japanese, already more energy efficient than the U.S., recognize
- that excessive pollution is a sign of inefficiency and that
- reducing pollution can help make industry more competitive. For
- Gore the real job of a competitiveness council would be to
- foster similar efforts to develop efficient technologies in the
- U.S.
- </p>
- <p> President Bush also has attacked Gore on the
- jobs-vs.-environment issue. During a visit to Colville,
- Washington, last month, he chastised the Senator for advocating
- protection of the spotted owl, which is endangered because 90%
- of its old-growth forest habitat has been cut. "It's time to put
- people ahead of owls," he said, and mockingly challenged Clinton
- to endorse Gore's book.
- </p>
- <p> Though that message was obviously meant to appeal to
- Western voters, Bush may have miscalculated its effect. While
- he was applauded by the region's timber workers, many other
- Westerners realize that the issue of preserving the remaining
- fragments of old-growth forest is more complex than owls vs.
- lumberjacks. George Atiyeh, a former timberman and
- fourth-generation Oregonian, left the business after watching
- what clear-cuts have done to the Oregon landscape. "Either my
- eyes were lying, or I was kidding myself about logging being
- sustainable," he says. From the air, Oregon's national forests
- look far worse than the rain forests of Rondonia, Brazil, which
- has become a symbol of the wanton destruction of the Amazon.
- Atiyeh argues that automation and exports have cost far more
- jobs than the protection of endangered species has. Between 1980
- and '88 the amount of timber cut in western Oregon increased 19%
- while timber employment fell 14%. The Administration's hard line
- on the environment does not appear to be winning many votes --
- and may even be hurting the Republicans. In a TIME/CNN poll of
- likely voters taken in late September, half the respondents said
- the loss of jobs because of environmental regulations was a "big
- problem." Yet when asked to choose between protecting the
- environment and protecting jobs, 48% chose the environment while
- 36% chose jobs. Forty percent of those questioned said they
- would be less likely to vote for a candidate if they disagreed
- with his environmental position even if they agreed on other
- major issues.
- </p>
- <p> That could spell trouble for the President, whose
- credibility on the issue is not high. When asked whether they
- felt Bush lied when he said he would be the "environmental
- President," 60% said yes. The figures were larger among baby
- boomers (62%) and independents (63%). Even among Republicans,
- 40% of those polled said he lied about his intentions.
- Ironically, the more Bush hammers at the jobs-vs.-environment
- issue, the more he seems to convince voters that he never meant
- to carry out his earlier promise.
- </p>
- <p> Bush's advisers may have begun to weigh the political
- risks of their hard-line stance on environment. Last week White
- House chief of staff James Baker vetoed a proposal by Quayle's
- Competitiveness Council that would have allowed businesses to
- use town dumps as disposal sites for certain hazardous wastes.
- Administration spokesmen have also begun to back away from
- another Competitiveness Council proposal that would vastly
- decrease the acreage now protected by wetlands legislation. The
- timing of all this could be coincidental. But it may be that,
- in the final stretch of his re-election campaign, Bush has
- concluded that one endangered species he would like to protect
- is his own presidency.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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