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Presidential Leadership and the Environment

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Title: Presidential Leadership and the Environment


1
Presidential Leadership and the Environment
  • UST 652/752 Environmental Policy
  • Dr. Kaufman
  • Presented by Sheetal Puthran

2
  • Understanding the relationship between
    population, human activities, and the
    environment, and developing strategies for an
    environmentally sustainable future are among the
    most complex issues with which society must deal.
  • The President must appear to have a significant
    role in environmental issues and the public
    expects to have strong environmental leadership
    from the White House.
  • It is important to examine the powers of the
    presidency to effect environmental change.
  • President cannot govern alone, he must rely
    on Congress to enact legislation and provide
    funding to carry out all activities.
  • The role of the president role gets
    stronger when the
    presidents won party has a majority role in both
    Congress as well as presidency.

3
Presidential powers in Environmental Policy cycle
  • Agenda setting Bringing issues to public
    attention,public debate,press conferences, media
    events.
  • Policy formulationDevoting presidential staff
    and mobilizing expertise inside and outside
    government.
  • Legitimate policy Supporting legislation in
    Congress and brokering compromises.
  • Policy Implementation Presidents use their
    powers to oversee the bureaucracy in various
    ways to influence policy implementation.
  • Finally they constantly assess and evaluate
    existing policies and propose reforms.

4
Two Radical Policy Change
  • There have been two periods in history when the
    public had demanded very strong leadership on
    the environment.
  • In 1970-72, when the environmental movement that
    had gathered force in 1960 reached a crescendo.
  • Understanding the force, President Nixon declared
    1970s as the Environmental Decade and signed
  • - The National Environmental Policy Act
  • - The Clean Air Act
  • - The Endangered Species Act
  • - Created the Environmental Protection
    Agency(EPA)
  • The second wave was in 1980s during Ronald
    Reagans presidency.
  • Serving as a vice-president to Reagan and then
    being elected President in 1988, George W. Bush
    supported passage of a major Clean Air Act in
    n1990.

5
Presidential Influence
  • A Presidents influence on Environmental policy
    can be evaluated by examining a few basic
    indicators
  • Presidents environmental Agenda
  • Presidential Appointments
  • Presidents proposed Budgets
  • Presidential Legislative Initiative
  • Presidents Executive Orders
  • Presidents opinion on International
    Environmental Agreements

6
Classification Contributions
  • Presidents can be classified generally in terms
    of their attitude towards the seriousness of
    environmental problems,based on relative
    priority.
  • OPPORTUNIST LEADERS
  • They held office at the peak of public opinion
    surges demanding action to strengthen
    environmental protection.
  • Richard Nixon
    George H. W. Bush

7
Classification Contributions(contd.)
  • FRUSTRATED UNDERACHIEVERS
  • Democratic Presidents who came to office with
    large environmental agendas and strong support
    from environmental constituencies but
    accomplished less than expected.
  • Jimmy Carter
    Bill Clinton

8
Classification Contributions(contd.)
  • ROLLBACK ADVOCATES
  • Presidents who came with negative environmental
    agendas.They represented anti-regulatory forces
    in the Republican Party and sought to roll back
    or weaken existing environmental legislation.
  • Ronald Reagan
    George W. Bush

9
The Reagan RevolutionChallenge to
Environmentalism
  • The environmental decade of the 1970 came to
    abrupt halt with Reagans victory in 1980.
  • The first president to come to office with an
    anti-environmental agenda
  • He saw environmental regulation as a barrier to
    supply side economics.
  • With a Republican majority in the Senate, he
    passed the Recovery Act of 1981 which reduced
    income taxes by nearly 25 and deeply cut
    spending for environmental and social programs.
  • He attempted to abolish the Council on
    Environmental Quality (CEQ) but failed.
  • Reagans budget cuts had major effects on the
    capacity of environmental agencies to
    implementing their growing policy mandates.

10
The Reagan RevolutionChallenge to
Environmentalism(contd.)
  • The EPA lost approximately one-third of its
    operating budget and one-fifth of its personnel
    in the early 1980s.
  • The CEQ lost most of its staff and barely
    continued to function.
  • Reagans appointees for EPA, Burford and James
    Watt were forced to resign due to their
    confidential dealings in business.
  • Recognizing and realizing the embarrassment,
    Reagan appointed William Ruckelshaus and Lee
    Thomas to restore EPA.
  • Though EPA was permanently weakened by the
    drastic budget cuts,the new appointees put
    efforts for restoration.
  • Reagan clearly lost the battle of public opinion
    on the environment.

11
The Bush Transition
  • Bush transition means, what began as a productive
    environmental administration deteriorated into
    defensive disarray in its final year.
  • He declared himself to be a conservationist in
    the tradition of Theodore Roosevelt and promised
    to be an environmental President
  • He pursued a bipartisan strategy in passing the
    Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990-the single
    important achievement.
  • The three major goals
  • - to control acid rain by reducing
    sulfur-dioxide emissions.
  • - to reduce air pollution in eighty urban
    areas.
  • - to lower emissions of 200 airborne toxic
    chemicals by 75 to 90 by 2000.

12
The Bush Transition (contd.)
  • During the last 18 months of Bush administration,
    Vice President Dan Quayles council operated in
    secrecy and frequently pressurized EPA and other
    agencies to ease regulations.
  • He refused to endorse binding international
    agreements to deal with climate change and
    bio-diversity at the 1992 Earth Summit.
  • He further refused to sign the Convention on
    Biodiversity despite efforts by his delegation
    chief, William Reilly.
  • Many environmentalists who had supported Bush
    were dismayed by his deteriorating environmental
    policies.

13
Clinton Presidency
  • Clinton was elected in 1992 election due to the
    strong support from environmental constituencies
    and green voters.
  • He came to office with strong and large
    environmental agendas but underachieved due to
    the competing priorities and lack of public and
    congressional support.
  • Initially Clinton had promised not to support
    NAFTA and GATT unless protections for labor and
    the environment were added.
  • But eventually alienated many environmentalist
    and democrats by uniting with Republicans to pass
    NAFTA in 1993 and GATT in 1994.
  • Although his intention was stabilize carbon
    dioxide emissions by signing the biodiversity
    convention ,the administration failed to
    implement the policy.

14
Clinton Presidency(contd.)
  • Clinton managed to regain public support by
    restoring most of the funding for environmental
    programs.
  • Unlike Reagan, he used his powers of appointment
    , budgeting, reorganization to reform and
    strengthen environmental protection.
  • He issued orders for creating and enlarging
    twenty-two national monuments and protecting
    millions of acres of forest lands.
  • Although there were congressional opposition,
    Clinton signed the Kyoto Protocol treaty in
    1998.
  • However Congress did not ratify the agreement and
    prohibited efforts to implement it.

15
Emission of CO2 by countries in 1990
16
President George W. BushA Preliminary Assessment
  • Bush was closely tied to the oil industry and
    cared relatively little about the environment.
  • He along with Dick Cheney who had headed
    Halliburton, proposed major increase in oil and
    energy production to prevent future energy
    shortages.
  • They called for opening public lands,including
    the Artic National Wildlife Refuge , to oil and
    gas development.

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
17
President George W. BushA Preliminary Assessment
(contd.)
  • Bush opposed designation of more national
    monuments without state and local consultation to
    reverse Clintons proclamations.
  • Most Controversial decisions announced in early
    2001 in Bushs administration were
  • - The United States would withdraw from
    the Kyoto Protocol
  • - Suspension of a regulation that would
    lower allowable level of arsenic in drinking
    water from 50 ppb(parts per billion) to 10 ppb.
  • - Delay in the plan to ban road
    construction in nearly 60 million acres of
    national forests.
  • Bushs unilateral decision to withdraw from
    international climate change regime has left the
    US more isolated in global environmental
    diplomacy.

18
Conclusion
  • The record of recent presidents demonstrates that
    the White House has had a significant but hardly
    singular or consistent role in shaping national
    environmental policy.
  • The United States cannot ultimately lead a world
    with which it refuses to cooperate in
    environmental diplomacy.
  • The President thus has a vital role to play in
    future environmental policy making on the global
    as well as the domestic stage.
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