America's First Climate Change President

Paul Krugman reminds us of the Edwards Effect:
Mr. Edwards led the way last March by proposing a serious plan for responding to climate change, and at this point both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are offering far stronger measures to limit emissions of greenhouse gases than anyone would have expected to see on the table not long ago.
The impact of John Edwards in this race cannot be overstated, at least as far as national climate policy goes.
If a Democrat is elected to high office in November, Americans will have a president who has acknowledged -- for the first time in our nation's history -- that climate change is one of the greatest moral and economic challenges on Earth. We will have a president who has accepted that solutions to climate change carry built-in boons for the US economy and a way out of oil dependency. A president who will assume office on day one with concrete plans to at least try to move the climate ball forward, finally.
And for that, we will have have John Edwards to thank. He did a helluva lot. He forced his two Democratic competitors early on to endorse specific greenhouse gas targets, a cap on emissions, renewed global climate leadership. Positions now taken for granted as baseline policy punches.
As Krugman says:
To understand the extent of the Edwards effect, you have to think about what might have been.
Ahhh, what might have been.
You may recall that right before Edwards dropped out the race, he committed to putting a moratorium on building new dirty coal plants. Yep, another first. Looking back now, it's unfortunate that he didn't go the distance from day one against dirty coal.
Because now he's without leverage. And according to the Edwards Effect, he may have been able force the no dirty coal issue into the Democratic mainstream.










