Obama’s Climate Win Won’t Stop His Downward Slide
Obama’s Climate Win Won’t Stop His Downward Slide · The Fiscal Times

President Obama had reason to revel over the historic climate change agreement ratified by the U.S. and 194 other countries in Paris over the weekend. It capped years of intense effort by Obama to bring along China, India and other global polluters while implementing tough standards at home to reduce dangerous greenhouse gas emissions.

“This agreement represents the best chance we’ve had to save the one planet we’ve got,” Obama said at the White House on Saturday following the unanimous vote. “This agreement sends a powerful signal that the world is fully committed to a low-carbon future.”

Related: Related: U.S. Senators Vow to Block Climate Aid, Scrutinize Paris Deal

But in many ways, Obama’s hands had been tied by a recalcitrant Republican-controlled Congress that has opposed rigorous new rules for curtailing carbon emissions from coal-fired power plants that most scientists say are contributing to the global warming crisis.

Just as Republicans have opposed Obama on the Affordable Care Act, the Iranian nuclear agreement, and his executive action on immigration, GOP legal and legislative action against his climate change policies hampered how far he could go in the international talks.

The final deal will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by only about half the levels necessary to address the worst of the problem, according to the agreementNew York Times. And the signatories are not legally bound to meet their long-term commitments – largely because there was no way Obama could win Senate approval of anything resembling a binding treaty.

Instead, countries will be obliged to periodically report on what they are doing to meet the overall target, but the global warming pact is voluntary.

“Some countries simply wouldn’t accept the mandatory mechanism, we among them,” Secretary of State John F. Kerry told Fox News Sunday yesterday. “So the best we can do in an effort to try to begin to change people’s thinking is to do this mandatory reporting requirement . . . that has to be updated every five years.”

Saturday’s global warming agreement likely marks the last important victory of the Obama administration, as the president finally appears to be slipping into lame duck status with little more than a year remaining in his second term.

Related: Obama Tries to Calm Fears in Major Address to Nation

While it’s always risky to write off a president who has lost his executive mojo and public support as a lame duck, the events of the past week or so suggest that he has begun to move dangerously into that territory. For example:

Obama’s 14-minute address to the nation one week ago seeking to reassure Americans after the deadly terrorist attacks in San Bernardino, California and Paris was widely panned by Republicans and Democrats alike as tepid and defensive. Many viewed it as little more than a rehash of Obama’s year-old strategy for trying to defeat ISIS in Syria and Iraq. Prominent leaders on both sides of the aisle said the country needed a more robust response from the commander-in-chief.