Today at United Nations Headquarters in New York City, Secretary of State John Kerry and representatives of over 130 nations will sign the Framework Convention on Climate Change agreement that was negotiated in Paris last December.
According to President Obama, this âhistoric agreementâ will âhold every country accountableâ if they fail to meet its carbon emission targets.
The White House has also acknowledged that the agreement contains âlegally bindingâ provisions designed to create a âlong-term frameworkâ that will force the United States and signatory countries to reduce carbon emissions for decades to come.
Despite these facts, President Obama has already announced he will not submit the Paris Climate Agreement to the Senate for advice and consent. Instead, the White House claims the signature environmental achievement of the presidentâs tenure is just an âinternational agreementâ not meriting Senate attention.
If the stakes werenât so high, this claim would be laughable on its face.
Not only was this agreementâs predecessor, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, submitted to the Senate and approved as a treaty, but when the Senate ratified that treaty, the Foreign Relations Committee specifically reported that any future emissions targets agreed to through the Convention âwould have to be submitted to the Senate for its advice and consent.â
President Obama has chosen to ignore this directive.
He has also chosen to ignore the State Departmentâs eight-factor test that is used to determine âwhether any international agreement should be brought into force as a treaty or as an international agreement other than a treaty.â
Those eight factors are:
1) The extent to which the agreement involves commitments or risks affecting the nation as a whole (the agreementâs carbon reductions will inflict costs on every American who consumes energy)
2) Whether the agreement is intended to affect state laws (the agreement will force states to meet emission targets)
3) Whether the agreement can be given effect without the enactment of subsequent legislation by the Congress (Congress will have to appropriate money for the agreementâs Green Climate Fund)
4) Past U.S. practice as to similar agreements (the agreementâs predecessor was submitted as a treaty)
5) The preference of the Congress as to a particular type of agreement (Congress wants to vote on this agreement)
6) The degree of formality desired for an agreement (the agreement is a highly detailed 31-page document)
7) The proposed duration of the agreement, the need for prompt conclusion of an agreement, and the desirability of concluding a routine or short-term agreement (the agreement sets emissions targets decades in advance)
8) The general international practice as to similar agreements (there are many, but the 1985 Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer is just one example)
The only reason President Obama is not sending the Paris Climate Agreement to the Senate as a treaty is that he knows the Senate would handily reject it.
This is an unacceptable breach of Article II Section 2 of the Constitution, and Congress must do something about it.
That is why we have introduced a concurrent resolution in the House and Senate expressing the sense of Congress that the Paris Climate Agreement must be submitted to the Senate as a treaty for its advice and consent.
If President Obama fails to do so, then Congress must prevent its implementation by forbidding any payments to the agreementâs âGreen Climate Fund,â an international slush fund included in the Paris agreement to induce developing nations to sign the agreement.
If Congress fails to specifically prohibit taxpayer money from being spent implementing the Paris Climate Agreement, then they will be complicit in President Obamaâs subversion of the Constitution.
Source: The Daily Signal