Gov. Jerry Brown says the existence of humanity rests on his climate change deal

Gov. Jerry Brown says the existence of humanity rests on his climate change deal

Gov. Jerry Brown on Thursday cast his new plan to fight climate change as essential to the fate of American democracy â€" and humanity itself.

“America is facing not just a climate crisis with the rest of the world, we are facing a political crisis,” Brown told lawmakers at the first public hearing on his proposal to reduce the state’s carbon emissions. “Can democracy actually work? Is there a sufficient consensus that we can govern ourselves? That, I submit to you, is an open question.”

Brown wants to extend through 2030 the state's cap-and-trade program, the centerpiece of California’s carbon-fighting effort, which forces businesses to pay to pollute.

His proposal, unveiled on Monday with Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount), has faced criticism from Republican legislators, who argue that it will cause gas and energy prices to surge, and some environmental advocates, who contend that the measure doesn’t do enough to protect the state’s most polluted communities. The plan has two components, continuing cap and trade, which is set to expire in 2020, and legislation to increase monitoring and impose stricter penalties on polluters.

Brown defended cap and trade as the most efficient program to regulate carbon while also allowing flexibility for economic growth. California’s syst em, Brown argued, serves as a model for carbon-reduction efforts across the world, from China to neighboring Oregon. The state, he said, needed to contrast itself with the federal government, which has taken a dim view of fighting climate change under the Trump administration.

Without cap and trade, Brown said, state regulators would be more heavy-handed in working to reduce carbon emissions, efforts that would cost businesses and consumers more. And he warned of mass migration, forest fires, floods, disease and other pestilence should lawmakers not act. Climate change, he said, “is a threat to organized human existence.”

“I'm not here about some cockamamie legacy that people talk about,” said Brown, 79, as he turned to the crowd in the Senate Environmental Quality Committee hearing. “This isn't for me. I'm going to be dead. It's for you. It's for you and it's damn real.”

California's representatives in Washington chimed in as well. Democratic U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein urged legislators to extend cap and trade in order to "demonstrate to the world that we remain committed to fighting climate change." On the right, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield), along with GOP Reps. Devin Nunes of Tulare, Ken Calvert of Corona and Tom McClintock of Elk Grove, urged Republican lawmakers in a letter to reject the plan, arguing the program helps finance Brow n's high-speed rail project, which they slammed as a "boondoggle."

Brown said in the hearing he realized extending cap and trade was politically difficult, and indicated he was open to more deals to get reluctant lawmakers on board. The decision, Brown said, addressing the senators on the committee, “is the most important vote of your life.”

“As we get older we have less patience,” he said. “I want to see this thing get done. We are going to get it. Whatever I gotta do, I want to do it.”

liam.dillon@latimes.com

@dillonliam

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