New World Order: Obama to BYPASS Congress with ‘Legally Binding’
UN Global Warming Treaty
(Daily Caller) –
Secretary of State John Kerry walked back remarks that a future United Nations
global warming treaty would not be legally binding. Now Kerry says a climate
treaty would, in fact, be legally binding and not require Senate approval.
“Our position has not
changed: the U.S. is pressing for an agreement that contains provisions both
legally binding and non-legally binding,” the State Department told Politico
regarding Kerry’s Thursday remarks.
Kerry told The
Financial Times Thursday that a U.N. treaty to reduce global carbon dioxide
emissions is “definitively not going to be a treaty.” At the same time,
European officials were arguing the treaty would be legally binding —
contradicting Kerry.
“The FT interview with
Secretary Kerry may have been read to suggest that the U.S. supports a
completely non-binding approach,” the State Department spokesperson said. “That
is not the case and that is not Secretary Kerry’s position.”
“It’s a disagreement on terminology, not
substance,” an anonymous “advocate” for a climate treaty told Politico.
“Kerry was using
domestic U.S. terminology, indicating that the agreement would not need to go
to the Senate; while … EU diplomats were indicating that the treaty would be
binding under international law.”
Kerry’s confusing
remarks come as U.S. diplomats are preparing to head to Paris this month for
the 21st U.N. climate summit. Delegates are expected to hash out a successor
agreement to the Kyoto Protocol, and there are high expectations for any such
agreement.
President Barack Obama
himself will travel to Paris Nov. 30 for the opening of the U.N. summit,
showing just how important getting countries to cut carbon dioxide emissions is
to the president in his last term in office.
Obama’s drive to get
countries like China to join the U.S. in cutting emissions faces little
opposition on the international stage, but could be derailed by a
Republican-controlled Senate. That’s why the administration has stressed the
“non-binding” aspect of the treaty.
In fact, the Obama
administration is specifically avoiding use of the word “treaty” to describe
any potential deal made in Paris. Calling it a “treaty” would imply Senate
approval, and that’s not going to happen with Republicans in control of
Congress.
“This news, so close
to the December negotiations, highlights both the reckless approach that the
Obama administration has taken going into Paris and the discord which has
ensued,” Oklahoma Republican Sen. Jim Inhofe said of Kerry’s recent
remarks.
Inhofe and other
lawmakers have vowed to block any treaty signed in Paris. The Senate is set to
vote Wednesday on resolutions opposing the Environmental Protection Agency
regulations limiting carbon dioxide emissions from power plants — the lynchpin
of Obama’s domestic climate agenda.
“As he remains concerned
with nothing but his legacy, the president is attempting to steamroll ahead
with an emissions reduction target that he continues to fail to articulate and
that the U.S. can neither reasonably achieve nor afford,” Inhofe said.
But for years, the
White House has been working to get a U.N. treaty that’s enforceable but
requires no Senate approval. The U.S. Constitution requires any treaties
have the “advice and consent of the Senate … provided two thirds of the
Senators present concur.”
What Obama plans is to
make a U.N. treaty only politically binding, meaning countries are essentially
making voluntary pledges to cut emissions. Somehow, the president also wants
these commitments to be enforceable on an international level as well.
“The theory is that, so
long as the emission-reduction targets are only politically binding, the
president would be under no obligation to submit them to the Senate,” Utah
Republican Sen. Mike Lee said in a speech at the conservative Heritage
Foundation.
Obama knows his chances
of getting countries to sign onto a deal will be diminished if everyone knows
the U.S. Senate won’t approve it. The White House has taken great pains
to thread the needle carefully on this issue, hoping they aren’t beaten by
Republicans.
“The hybrid-agreement
theory is clever, to be sure,” Lee said. “But it flatly contradicts the
understanding of the Framework Convention that has been universally accepted
since its ratification in 1992.”
“Targets and
timetables of any legal character have always been understood to require the
Senate’s advice and consent,” Lee said.
http://dailycaller.com/2015/11/13/sec-kerry-argues-un-global-warming-treaty-will-be-legally-binding-but-wont-need-senate-approval/#ixzz3rQ1QxNeh?print=1?print=1
http://www.teaparty.org/new-world-order-obama-to-bypass-congress-with-legally-binding-un-global-warming-treaty-129680/
No comments:
Post a Comment