Mulling Run Against Green New Deal Sponsor Ed Markey, Joe Kennedy Is Heavily Invested in Fossil Fuels

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Byย Donald Shaw, Sludge.ย This story originally appearedย in Sludge.ย It is republished here as part ofย DeSmog’s partnership with Covering Climate Now,ย a global collaboration of more thanย 250ย news outlets to strengthen coverage of the climateย story.

Rep. Joe Kennedy III (D-Mass.), the grandson of former attorney general Robert F. Kennedy, has filed paperwork to challenge Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), one of the Senateโ€™s most progressive members and the chief sponsor of the Senate version of the Green New Dealย resolution.

โ€œI hear the folks who say I should wait my turn, but with due respect โ€” Iโ€™m not sure this is a moment for waiting,โ€ Kennedy wrote in an August 26 Facebook post. โ€œI donโ€™t think our democratic process promises anyone a turn. What it does promise is the chance for anyone to earn it โ€” if we think we have something to offer and are willing to put ourselves and our ideas outย there.โ€ย 

If Kennedy were to officially enter the race he would instantly be the favorite, withย pollsย showing Kennedy with a massive lead over Markey in a hypotheticalย run.ย 

As he considers whether to enter the race, Kennedy owns as much as $1.75 million worth of stock in the fossil fuel industry, including oil and gas companies that see Markeyโ€™s Green New Deal as an existential threat, according to a Sludge review of financial disclosureย documents.ย 

Kennedyโ€™s holdings, which are contained in inherited family trusts, include Chevron stock worth between $100,001 and $250,000, ExxonMobil stock worth between $500,002 and $1,000,000, and $15,001 to $50,000 worth of stock in Schlumberger, the worldโ€™s largest oilfield services provider. Kennedy also owns $180,004 to $450,000 worth of stock in NextEra Energy, a utility company that owns a coal- and natural gas-burning Florida powerย company.

Chevron and ExxonMobil have been linked to efforts to fight the Green New Deal. Chevronย donatedย $1.75 million during the 2018 election cycle to a super PAC that ranย attack adsย against Democrats for their support of the Green New Deal. ExxonMobil is a founding member of the Climate Leadership Council, a think tank that is promoting a carbon tax policy that its leadershipย saysย is a more efficient and less expensive alternative to the Green New Deal. Climate scientists have called the carbon tax proposal anย insufficient responseย to the climateย crisis.ย ย ย 

In December 2018, Kennedyโ€™s press secretary, Dan Black,ย told Sludgeย that โ€œCongressman Kennedyโ€™s family investments play no role in his decision-making in Congress.โ€ Kennedy is a co-sponsor of the Green New Deal resolution in the House and a signatory of the No Fossil Fuel Money pledge, a commitment to not knowingly take campaign contributions from PACs, lobbyists, and executives in the fossil fuelย industry.ย 

Green New Deal author Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) endorsed Markey on Sept. 13. โ€œIn a time right now, when we have to have conversations not just about holding this administration accountable but changing the Democratic Party for the future, Ed Markey has a very critical role in making sure that climate change, as well as a bevy of other issuesโ€”health care and beyondโ€”are critical core issues in how we fight for working people and working families in the United States,โ€ Ocasio-Cortez said in aย video.

Markey has also been endorsed by fellow Massachusetts senator and Democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren. โ€œWe need Ed Markey in the Senate now more than ever,โ€ Warren said in aย videoย posted by Markeyโ€™sย campaign.

Kennedy has beenย endorsed by Sen. Kyrsten Sinemaย (D-Ariz.), a centrist who was co-chair of the conservative Blue Dog PAC while she was a House representative. Sinema wasย one of three Democrats to vote against Markeyโ€™s Green New Deal resolutionย inย March.ย ย 

Main image:ย Rep. Joe Kennedy and Sarah McBride, author of Tomorrow Will Be Different, in 2018.ย and Credit:ย Ted Eytan,ย CC BYSAย 2.0

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