[Congressional Bills 117th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 125 Introduced in House (IH)]
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117th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 125
To oppose the use of the National Emergencies Act to declare a national
emergency relating to climate change.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
February 15, 2021
Mr. Pfluger (for himself, Mr. Cloud, Mr. Jackson, and Mr. Burgess)
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on Transportation and Infrastructure, and in addition to the Committee
on Energy and Commerce, for a period to be subsequently determined by
the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall
within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
To oppose the use of the National Emergencies Act to declare a national
emergency relating to climate change.
Whereas, on January 27, 2021, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer declared that
``It might be a good idea for President Biden to call a climate
emergency'' and that ``He can do many, many things under the emergency
powers . . . that he could do without legislation.'';
Whereas the National Emergencies Act (NEA) was enacted with the intent of
reining in emergency executive authority and preserving an appropriate
balance of power between the coequal legislative and executive branches
of government;
Whereas the declaration of a national emergency for purposes of addressing a so-
called climate crisis would fall outside the bounds of an emergency as
contemplated by the NEA;
Whereas the late Edward S. Corwin, an eminent constitutional scholar, explained
emergency conditions as being those that ``have not attained enough of
stability or recurrency to admit of their being dealt with according to
rule'';
Whereas if there were to declare a climate national emergency, President Biden
would undeniably break his pledge to ``be a president for all Americans,
all Americans'' and that he would ``fight as hard for those who did not
support me as those who did'';
Whereas, as a candidate, President Biden noted that the President ``can't
[legislate] by executive order unless you`re a dictator. We're a
democracy. We need consensus.'';
Whereas President Biden has already undertaken a plethora of executive actions
that would directly reverse or undermine important and commonsense
deregulatory actions of the Trump administration, including that Biden
has ordered the United States to rejoin the Paris Agreement, begun the
process of reversing President Trump's Waters of the United States Rule,
shuttered the Keystone XL Pipeline project, and halted energy production
activities in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge;
Whereas a climate national emergency, and actions taken pursuant thereto, would
magnify his environment agenda that is littered with policies that would
drive up consumer costs, produce job losses, drive up Federal deficits,
increase dependence on oil from foreign countries, and generally
disadvantage the United States with nations such as Saudi Arabia and
Mexico, as well as adversaries such as China, Russia, Iran, and
Venezuela;
Whereas according to the Brennan Center for Justice, ``Emergency powers cover
almost every imaginable subject area, including the military, land use,
public health, trade, federal pay schedules, agriculture,
transportation, communications, and criminal law'' and the Brennan
Center has identified 136 statutory provisions available during national
emergencies;
Whereas the myriad of ways in which Biden could seek to carry out his expansive
climate agenda cannot be predicted with certainty;
Whereas President Biden's climate agenda includes broad, far-reaching policy
proposals that extend far past the acute, severe emergencies envisioned
under the National Emergencies Act, such as a commitment to end the use
of all fossil fuels by 2050, decarbonizing the food and agriculture
sectors, and unprecedented Federal spending on clean energy research and
innovation;
Whereas President Biden would be broadly empowered to assert Federal control in
domestic and international economic matters with no guardrails clearly
defining the parameters of the emergency; and
Whereas the United States of America has already reduced CO2 emissions to a 20-
year low: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) opposes use of the National Emergencies Act to declare
a so-called ``climate emergency'';
(2) recognizes that any policy-making action taken to
address global climate conditions should be undertaken by the
legislative branch, not through unilateral executive action;
(3) recognizes that addressing global climate conditions
through the National Emergencies Act would violate the purpose
of the Act as well as separation of powers; and
(4) opposes executive actions that would increase the
United States dependence on foreign oil, deprive Americans of
jobs, increase consumer costs, or disadvantage the United
States relative to adversarial nations such as Russia and
China.
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