That’s
the question that Carbon Control News considers
today in an article the publication has placed outside its
subscriber wall, just for you special blogreaders! Unfortunately
CCN’s reporter can draw no definitive conclusions:
(Florida Gov. Charlie Crist’s appointee) George
LeMieux, who will be sworn in as Florida’s junior senator
when Congress reconvenes next week, ran Crist’s successful 2006
campaign for governor and served as Crist’s chief of staff
until the beginning of last year, when he returned to private
practice at a Tallahassee law firm. As Crist’s top aide,
LeMieux helped organize the governor’s first climate summit in
2007, during which activists, scientists and public officials
from around the world gathered in Miami to consider the
challenge presented by global warming and develop potential
solutions.
As the Miami Herald reported
(and I blogged
about) last month, Crist has begun his run to replace
quitting Sen. Mel Martinez by running with hair on fire from the
no-longer-helpful global warming issue, after basking in media
love the last two years when he hosted climate panic conferences
featuring California Gov. Arnold Warmalarmer. This year Charlie
says he may not hold another speech meet because of concern over
the costs to sponsors (really!). But even though LeMeiux (”I am a
Charlie Crist Republican”) will placehold, CCN says
there’s no telling how he’ll vote on the Senate version of a
cap-and-tax bill this year:
While environmentalists are encouraged by the appointment,
LeMieux’s membership on the board of an industry organization
that opposes cap-and-trade, combined with the potential
pressure created by Crist’s conservative Republican primary
opponent (that’s former Fla. House Speaker Marco Rubio),
suggest his support for climate legislation is far from
assured.
Because the two are so closely aligned, Crist likely will
have to answer on the campaign trail for LeMieux’s votes on
Senate legislation, which likely will include a cap-and-trade
bill expected to be introduced by Sens. Barbara Boxer (D-CA)
and John Kerry (D-MA) as soon as next month.
If the belief still exists that Crist is anything more than the
Sunshiny State’s Specter of
Arlen, then Orlando Sentinel columnist Mike Thomas
squashes it like a
malarial mosquito:
…Predicting Crist is simple. Simply do the political
calculation.
He would easily beat any Democrat in the Senate race. All
he has to worry about is Rubio in the primary. So the
environmentalists are of little use to him now. They may
grumble as he abandons them, but he knows they won’t publicly
attack him because he is going to win. And they will need him
in the future, if not for climate change then for Everglades
funding.
Crist is on your side when there is something in it for
him.
And when it comes to climate change, there is nothing in it
for Crist anymore.
That is, until the political winds change again.
Cross-posted
at Globalwarming.org.