White House Leaning Toward Exiting Paris Climate Pact
Timothy Cama
White House officials are leaning toward taking the United States out of the Paris climate agreement, people familiar with the deliberations say.
While some in the Trump administration have warmed in recent days to the idea of staying in the non-binding pact while potentially changing the United States’ commitment, top officials are now leaning the other way, sources said Tuesday.
Trump could announce as soon as next week his plans to pull out. The Huffington Post and New York Times reported on the developments earlier Tuesday.
Central to the administration’s debate is whether the U.S. could reduce its commitment to reducing greenhouse gases for the 2015 pact without running afoul of it.
The agreement states that a country “may at any time adjust its existing nationally determined contribution with a view to enhancing its level of ambition,” which sources say concerns White House Counsel Don McGahn and his staff.
If Trump wanted to ratchet down former President Barack Obama’s promise of a 26 percent to 28 percent emissions cut by 2025, the agreement may prevent it.
The administration is also worried that staying in the accord would give environmentalists a legal argument to prevent Trump from repealing climate regulations like the Clean Power Plan.
In litigation over that rule in 2015, the Justice Department told the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit that stopping the regulation would hurt the U.S. diplomatically.
That court declined to halt the rule, but on appeal, the Supreme Court did pause it. Trump is now working to repeal the regulation.
Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt and White House strategist Stephen Bannon have been leading the charge for Trump to fulfill his campaign promise and exit the pact.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and White House adviser Jared Kushner, who is also Trump’s son-in-law, have led the charge to stay in, arguing that it’s better diplomatically while keeping the U.S. in international discussions regarding climate policy.
At a Saturday rally, Trump blasted the agreement as “one-sided” and cited it as an example of a pact in which “the United States pays the costs and bears the burdens while other countries get the benefit and pay nothing.” He said it would cause a big hit to the economy and spur factories to close.
Attorneys from various government agencies met Monday to discuss the legal implications of staying in the deal, and the White House counsel’s office took Pruitt’s side, the Times reported.
Andrew Light, a senior fellow at the World Resources Institute who worked on climate negotiations at the State Department under Obama and who helped negotiate the Paris pact, dismissed the legal concerns over staying in the agreement, saying that since the emissions cuts aren’t binding, there is no legal problem.
In White House, Momentum Turns Against Paris Climate Agreement
The Washington Post, 3 April 2017
Juliet Eilperin
Foes of the Paris climate agreement have gained the upper hand in the ongoing White House debate over whether the U.S. should pull out of the historic pact, according to participants in the discussions and those briefed on the deliberations, although President Trump has yet to make a final decision.
Senior administration officials have met twice since Thursday to discuss whether the United States should abandon the U.N. accord struck in December 2015, under which the United States pledged to cut its greenhouse gas emissions 26 percent to 28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025.
The president’s aides remain divided over the international and domestic legal implications of remaining party to the agreement, which has provided a critical political opening for those pushing for an exit.
On Thursday several Cabinet members — including Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt, who’s called for exiting the accord, Energy Secretary Rick Perry, who wants it renegotiated, and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who advocates remaining a party to it — met with top White House advisers, including Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, and Chief of Staff Reince Priebus.
Both Ivanka Trump and Kushner advocate remaining part of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, even though the president has repeatedly criticized the global warming deal.
During that meeting, according to several people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, White House counsel Don McGahn informed participants that the United States could not remain in the agreement and lower the level of carbon cuts it would make by 2025.
The administration is working to unravel many Obama-era policies underpinning that pledge, and the economic consulting firm Rhodium Group has estimated that the elimination of those policies would mean the United States would cut its emissions by 14 percent by 2025 compared with 21 percent if they remained in place. This interpretation represented a change from the White House counsel’s earlier analysis and is at odds with the State Department’s view of the agreement.
Susan Biniaz, who served as the State Department’s lead climate lawyer from 1989 until earlier this year, said in an interview Tuesday that the agreement reached by nearly 200 nations in Paris allows for countries to alter their commitments in either direction.
“The Paris agreement provides for contributions to be nationally determined and it encourages countries, if they decide to change their targets, to make them more ambitious,” Biniaz said. “But it doesn’t legally prohibit them from changing them in another direction.”
Ivanka Trump urged White House staff secretary Rob Porter to convene a second meeting Monday with lawyers from both the White House and the State Department. That session addressed the question of America’s obligations under the 2015 deal as well as whether remaining in the agreement would make it more difficult for the administration to legally defend the changes it was making to the federal government’s existing climate policies, but it did not reach a final decision.
Pruitt, who is spearheading the effort to rewrite several Obama-era rules aimed at curbing greenhouse gas emissions, has argued that exiting the agreement will make it easier to fend off the numerous legal lawsuits he will face in the months ahead.
At a rally with supporters Saturday, Trump said he would make a “big decision” on Paris within the next two weeks and vowed to end “a broken system of global plunder at American expense.”
Administration advisers on both sides of the political spectrum, however, emphasized that the president himself would decide what path to pursue when it came to the climate agreement.
The Centuries-Old Legal Doctrine Looming Over Trump’s Paris Climate Decision
Jennifer A Dlouhy
If the U.S. withdraws from the Paris climate accord — an option gaining favor among top White House advisers — Charming Betsy may be partly to blame.
Or, more specifically, the Charming Betsy doctrine. That’s a legal principle stemming from a 213-year-old case involving a schooner of the same name. It says that federal policies should be interpreted, when possible, so they don’t conflict with international laws.
The doctrine has emerged as a major point of contention in White House debates over continued membership in the international climate pact. At issue is whether staying in the accord could legally oblige President Donald Trump to preserve carbon-cutting policies that he is moving to jettison.
The White House counsel’s office warned Trump administration officials in a meeting Thursday and in a separate memo that if the U.S. stays in the global accord, it could arm environmentalists with legal ammunition for lawsuits challenging the president’s domestic regulatory rollbacks.
Those concerns were amplified in a meeting of White House staff and administration lawyers on Monday, as officials also expressed skepticism about whether the U.S. has authority to dial back its Paris pledge to slash greenhouse gas emissions.
The debates were detailed by three people familiar with the meetings who asked not to be identified describing internal discussions.
Even though concerns with remaining in the Paris accord have dominated the two most recent White House meetings on the subject, the final decision rests with Trump, who has shown himself to be unpredictable in carrying out past campaign vows.
While running for president, Trump promised the U.S. would leave the deal, taking aim at the cornerstone of former President Barack Obama’s efforts to combat climate change. Under Obama, the U.S. played a leading role driving the global accord, which culminated with the support of nearly 200 countries in December 2015. The U.S. pledged to cut its carbon emissions 26 to 28 percent from 2005 levels by 2025.
Trump promised during a rally Saturday in Pennsylvania to make a “big decision” on the Paris accord over the next two weeks. He derided the agreement as a “one-sided” deal that threatens U.S. economic output and will spur the closing of factories and plants nationwide.
“We are not going to let other countries take advantage of us anymore, because, from now on, it’s going to be America first,” Trump told the crowd in Harrisburg.
Top administration officials have been divided over whether the president should make good on his campaign pledge and get out. A State Department memo circulated last week asserts the Paris agreement imposes few obligations on the U.S.
Meanwhile, under questioning from White House chief strategist Steve Bannon at Thursday’s meeting of top aides on the issue, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt said remaining in the agreement imperils his effort to undo Obama’s Clean Power Plan paring greenhouse gas emissions from electricity, the people familiar with the session said.
Supporters of the deal, including environmentalists, a handful of coal companies and some oil producers, warn that U.S. exports, including natural gas and clean energy technology, could face economic sanctions if the country abandons the pact.
“Using the flexibility of the Paris agreement to reduce our commitment, or even going so far as to pull us out, would be a disaster for the United States because it would provoke international blowback, harm our global leadership role, and threaten the health and safety of all families in this country,” Sierra Club Global Climate Policy Director John Coequyt said in an emailed statement.
Mike McKenna, a Republican energy consultant pushing for an exit, argues there’s just too much legal risk to stay in.
“With the exception of those State Department lawyers who abetted in the original unwise decision to sign onto the Paris agreement, the lawyers all seem to agree that the right answer is to exit the agreement swiftly, decisively and cleanly,” McKenna said. The alternative is “UN bureaucrats and fellow travelers having a say in how Americans produce and consume energy.”
But supporters say the U.S. has wide latitude to rewrite a scaled-back pledge or ignore its existing commitment altogether. To lure international support for the agreement, negotiators built flexibility in the deal, encouraging countries to make highly tailored, individual pledges known as “nationally determined commitments,” rather than agree to a universal greenhouse gas target.
h/t to The GWPF


The difference is proud, civil courage:
https://youtu.be/Cv6tuzHUuuk
An agreement to solve a problem that doesn’t exist with an expensive (for the US) solution that won’t work, even by its own standards, and wouldn’t be followed by most of the world.
Just do it, Donald. Put it out of our misery and send a message that the stupidity is being rolled back, slightly. The lamentations, wailing, and gnashing of teeth is already always at 11 anyway. They have nothing worse to say than what has already been said. It is time for the ghost of exaggerations-past to start haunting them.
https://www.google.at/search?q=proud%2C+the+12+deadly+sins+of+st.+augustinus&oq=proud%2C+the+12+deadly+sins+of+st.+augustinus&aqs=chrome.
The holy St. Augustinus himself was a deepest sinner leaving his mother alone on the north african shore when boarding a ship across the Mediterranean Sea heading to Rome.
Bigotry, selfishness.
Do it!!
The organic food trucks should be making a killing off the price mark ups and extra foot traffic of the marches for politicized science etc.
Why not recognize it as a Treaty and have the Senate vote on it?
Because it isn’t one. Why elevate the piece of garbage to a status it never had and never will?
I think the new administration should cut the crap.
Obama was not entitled to enter into that treaty without the consent of the congress.
Hold all related press conferences in Minot.
Trump’s first hundred or so days have passed.
Either Tillerson or Ivanka have identified and detailed all benefits to staying at the Paris table;
Or, after weeks of squirming and hoping that Trump will forget, the questions; Trump is asking why the Paris nonsense is still a burden.
There are no obvious reasons for the USA to continue attending the climate conferences.
A) Everyone, that is, everyone in the world views whomever sits in the USA seat as a massive easy open cash register.
B) Everyone in the world’s elite climate negotiations fails to understand why Trump would not jump on the world socialist juggernaut returning all world workers back to slavery and serfdom.
– – a) Trump is obviously not taking America down any communist primrose path.
– – b) Nor will Trump share any of America’s wealth with euro bureaucrats.
C) Trump’s draining the swamp will eventually erase much of the science on which IPCC and climate negotiators base their alarmisms.
– – a) Then again, if the world’s climate agencies are determined to keep to the alarmist path; USA will have quite a few miscreant researchers needing new positions. Though they’ll likely work for much less and perhaps a few herrings on the side. (that manniacal mikey guy looks like a frequent herring snack kind of guy).
• Thirty years of failed alarmist predictions.
• Hundreds of failed climate models.
• Thousands of easy peasy researchers that do not perform real science and believe they deserve wealth and rich living.
• Alarmist cocksure beliefs that America can fund bad science and worse science researchers forever.
• Alarmist easy living and willingness to trash thousands of hard working lives eager to improve their small worlds.
• Investigate, prosecute and consider charging a number of the central climate felons with treason.
It is time to clean the climate house from top to bottom!
No obligations is UN /international ideologues’ well known strategy. A@enda twotytwo is a perfect example of a motherhood type strategy with a long term bear trap on the end that has been adopted at the municipal and county level. Get property owners to agree to not cut trees along streams and roadways seems a nice gesture to esthetics/scenic goals that are ‘voluntary’. Gee, we will even cut the grass along the property line, maybe plant some wild flowers and keep the underbrush trimmed for ya, at no expense to you. The encroachment and bylaws eventually have prohibitions that prevent you from doing anything without their permit.
They use existing statutes to eventually erode your rights. They act on complaints, etc. etc. Every American should read “Not a shot was fired” by Jan Kozak, a patient diabolical plan using a democratic parliament to eventually get the citizens of Czechoslovakia to clammer for a кoмциist takeover of a democ government. This kind of stuff was invented by a nation of chess players.
+1 Most people don’t even realize the deceit that has been sneaking up to control them. ‘They’ call it “conspiracy theory” but in fact it’s real. Agenda21 is almost 500 pages of obfuscation but if you read it carefully, not even between the lines, the intent is for the UN to take over control with a world government. I believe Trump’s election is the counter attack. Call it Populist movement or whatever but people who have tasted Democracy and freedom KNOW when there’s an attempt to remove either.
How many people voted for Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner in the US presidential election?
How many people voted for any of the other Trump advisors?
I can understand that you may want to remain in the Paris agreement for political reasons, I just cant think what those reasons could be!
Influence? Just give the billions direct to poor countries if you want real influence.
You have too much money and want to give some away, see point one.
To look good/cool/righteous – to who? People who worry about climate only do so because they have been told to worry. People will move onto the next worry in 6 months time, post funding cuts.
Uncontrolled tax and spend helps no one other than a few multinationals and NGOs.
Stop it and stop it now.
If you don’t get rid of it then when the Democrats get power again (and they will) they’ll have the framework for an immediate clampdown. Without it at least it’ll take a couple years to start over.
They need desperately to reverse EPA’s endangerment finding re CO2. This has opened the door to mainstream adoption of the concept that CO2 is a pollutant. This needs to be a top priority.
Did our authors use a climate model to reach this prediction? Because the observed data of his backpedalling toward announcements of success suggest that more likely next week we’ll learn that the bears, “the white ones, white, very white bears, so cute” are running out of penquins to eat (also cute “but a little fishy”) and announce every house in America must have a big beautiful windmill in the front yard. Best windmills ever.
running out of penquins to eat
The polar bears are not running out of penguins to eat. As of now — after eating all the Arctic penguins — most bears are swimming south to Antartica (‘undocumented’) because they read the literature and want save the penguins
from global warmingfor themselves.If, to save the polar bears from the environment in which they’ve thrived for the past 30 years, we need to move them to Antarctica, then they’ll find plenty of seals there to eat.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weddell_seal
So they won’t be reduced to eating foul-tasting, fishy penguins.
Can a party to the agreement change their emissions targets by increasing them as follows:
Say the initial target is a 2% reduction per year for 15 years for a total of 30%.
Instead the new target is a 50% reduction, with first increases for 50 years stay level for 50 years then decrease over the following 200 years.
After Trump’s election campaigning rhetoric and promises, and in light of his energy policy and objective to create an economic boom, he would look like a bloody idiot if he fails to withdraw America from the Paris Agreement.
Just one concern … the closeness of his democrat climate change believing daughter Ivanka who has “daddy’s ear”!!!! Please, someone, send Ivanka on a world tour. Just keep her away from the White House over the next week.
The only logical step is to leave the Paris Climate Agreement, otherwise it will not be economical to revive the US economy. Simply said, we can’t afford the Paris Climate Agreement and neither can Europe or any other country unless they are suicidal from a social, scientific, ethical and economic perspective.
Join the Paris Climate Agreement and destroy your civilization…Oops that wasn’t written in the agreement was it?
And don’t forget UN Agenda 21 and Agenda 30… Absolutely devastating treaties for all of humanity.