Sierra Club and Gang Green: Oil Spill Cleanup 'Just Fine'

Josh Gerstein has an
article in Politico
on the massive silence coming out of the
enviros on the BP oil catastrophe, which has been notable ever
since the rig collapsed
. This weekend the groups took out an ad in
the Washington Post, not to criticize the administration for their
response, but to praise the President for putting a hold on a drilling
project in Alaska:

"President Obama is the best
environmental president we've had since Teddy Roosevelt," Sierra Club chairman Carl Pope told the Bangor Daily
News last week. "He obviously did not take the crisis in the Minerals
Management Service adequately seriously, that's clear. But his agencies
have done a phenomenally good job."

If they aren't saying anything negative, it's because they believe
there's nothing to criticize:

Asked if Sierra Club has any concerns
about the administration's response to the spill, [Sierra Club's Dave]
Willett said, "Overall, we're satisfied with the cleanup and
recovery effort."

Now, I listened to Mike Pence yesterday on CNN complaining about the
administration's cleanup efforts, and it was utter bullshit. They
should've had a photo up of Pence with oil dripping off of his hands.
The GOP has been waging a decades-long campaign for offshore drilling
without limit, massive deregulation and complete contempt for
environmental oversight that paved the way for this. The entire gulf is
going to hell as a direct result of his actions. He's in no position to
criticize anything, and any journalist who lets him get away with it
isn't doing their job.

But the reluctance of the environmental groups to criticize the
administration over the cleanup means they can't credibly make that
argument. Their decision to act as partisan cheerleaders has hamstrung
their ability to act as trustworthy arbiters and advocates in the
situation. We all know what their tone and tenor would be if George Bush
was at the helm right now. If they are perceived as acting as an arm of
the Democratic Party rather than stewards of the environment, they
destroy their brand and the integrity of their message.

Part of it is because they're in
the veal pen
, and the White House has done an excellent job of
keeping them in line since they took office with groups like Common
Purpose, Unity 09 and the "8:45 Call." Matt Nisbet, a professor of
environmental communications at American University, says "it's
difficult for the national environmental groups to be critics of the
administration - they're working so closely with the administration. ...
They have reacted cautiously and softly."

There's also "a practical sense among the groups that Obama is about
the best they're going to do when it comes to their key issues," says
Gerstein. And according to Doug Brinkley, "they're feeling they have one
person to do business with. ... We're down to like two Republican
senators who want to deal with these environmental groups."

The Sierra Club has one of the most well-known progressive brands,
and they have a membership that is both deep and broad. Their ability to
advocate for environmental causes doesn't depend on access to
politicians. It appears that they have they have opted for an "inside"
game, and have completely dropped the ball on pressuring elected
officials from the outside - right when they could have the most impact.

They also don't want to jeopardize the passage of a climate
legislation bill, and have been fearful from the start that making too
much fuss about offshore drilling could endanger Kerry-Lieberman. Is the
passage of some shitty big coal bailout what their members desire
most? Because it sounds more like what the Democratic Party and its
lobbyists want
.

The "veal pen" strategy executed by the White House insures this
silence, which Obama consciously uses as cover:

"We have responded with unprecedented
resources, and when you look at what most of the critics say
...and you ask them, specifically, what is it that the administration
could or should have done differently that would have an impact on
whether or not oil was hitting shore, you're met with silence,"

Obama said in an interview aired Tuesday on NBC's "Today Show."

But the Sierra Club isn't alone. They've got plenty of company with
the National Resources Defense Council:

"I think that made people plenty angry.
Every time you see a picture like that, it breaks your heart," Deans
said. "Certainly, we're outraged, but it's not our job to generate
outrage. It's our role to try to focus that sentiment on priorities we
need to make our country stronger."

Some say that even though environmental groups aren't dominating the
debate, their issues certainly are -and are driving huge swings in
public opinion against drilling and in favor of action on climate
issues.

Well those swings are being channeled by the Center for Biological
Diversity, the group that was out there proving that the
administration's actions didn't match up with its words, and that MMS
was still
granting offshore drilling permits, even after Ken Salazar promised
they wouldn't. Meanwhile other groups were sitting on their hands,
or doing what veal pen outfits do - reaping the benefits of a
catastrophe by expanding their memberships and fundraising.

The oil industry has done a
good job of buying the silence
of many "environmental
organizations." PBS has been virtually silent on the spill, as
sponsorship of its major shows is largely dominated by oil money. Media
outlets that likewise depend heavily on advertising from oil companies
have provided pathetic coverage of the spill and its consequences,
focusing instead on completely stupid distractions like "has the
President shown enough emotion."

The environmental groups that have the brand names and the public
trust are thus the only entities that can penetrate the message machine.
When they speak, the public knows who they are and they listen. And
they are the ones that the media goes to for quotes and commentary for
just that reason. Their wide brand name recognition guarantees them that
platform, and it's difficult to organize around them when they're AWOL.

Corralling the veal pen is a tactic that the White House has
successfully used to cover their left flank since Obama took office. We
saw it with the choice groups during the health care bill. As a result,
Obama's poll numbers with liberals stay high, and he feels no need to
address the issues of the base. By stitching up the validators, he's
able to pursue a corporatist agenda while groups with brand name trust
wage a public relations campaign to cast it as "progressive."

These groups have demonstrated by both their action and inaction that
they do not deserve that public trust. Unlike the Center for Biological
Diversity
, fawning groups like the Sierra Club have been
successfully manipulated both by corporate money and by partisan
gamesmanship. They've become such complete Washington DC creatures that
they don't know how to be advocates from the outside any more - their
primary function is to give political cover in the midst of a PR battle.
They have abdicated the role of non-partisan watchdogs, and the public
should find new organizations independent of party control in which to
place their trust.

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