A lot can change in four years. In 2019, a group of newly elected progressive lawmakers backed a grand plan to tackle climate change while democratizing the economy. They were considered radical outcasts, clashing with Democratic Party leaders and watching their sweeping Green New Deal all but die on the vine. Now, many of them hold top roles in Congress, where their ideas influence legislation, write Kelsey Brugger and Jeremy Dillion. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, who is now the top Democrat on a House Natural Resources subcommittee, put it this way (paraphrasing a quote often attributed to Gandhi): “First they ridicule you, then they fight you, and then you win.” While the Green New Deal package stalled, a number of its hallmark ideas found a home in last year’s massive climate law, such as allocating billions of dollars for climate programs and clean energy manufacturing incentives. The shift is in part due to progressives’ increasing willingness to work with party leaders, which has also earned them criticism from some former supporters. Ocasio-Cortez, in particular, has fielded accusations of selling out as she has transitioned from starting high-profile fights with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to calling her the “mama bear of the Democratic Party.” But coloring within the party lines could come with a major payoff. If Democrats can win back control of the House next year, climate-focused lawmakers will be well-positioned to advance some of their biggest goals. That includes creating millions of living-wage jobs in the clean energy sector and ensuring the benefits go to low-income and marginalized communities, which are overburdened by toxic air, water and soil pollution. “I didn’t think we would ever become inside-baseball people,” said Rep. Jamaal Bowman of New York, referring to his fellow progressive Democrats. Bowman, now the top Democrat on the House Science, Space and Technology Subcommittee on Energy, would be chair if his party takes back the House. “It’s very important because I’m a major part of setting the [research and development] agenda for the country around the issue of energy,” he told Kelsey and Jeremy. “That’s a big deal.”
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