June 28, 2021
Washington, DC — Rep. John Curtis (R-UT), member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, announced the new Conservative Climate Caucus in a press conference at the US Capitol. The Congressman will serve as Chairman and lead the Caucus of over 60 members, including representatives from every committee with jurisdiction over climate policy and various ranking members.
“I am proud to launch the Conservative Climate Caucus with many of my Republican colleagues. Republicans have conservative solutions to lower emissions while enhancing economic prosperity. We do care about climate – and we already have solutions and plan to find more.
The goal of the Conservative Climate Caucus is to bring members of the Republican party together to educate each other on climate policies that will make real progress on reducing emissions through American innovation and resources. Proposals to reduce emissions and be good stewards of the earth do not have to hurt the American economy – in fact they do the opposite. There is a way to lower global emissions without sacrificing American jobs and principles – and I believe Republicans are the ones that can and should be leading the charge.
I look forward to working with my colleagues to advance a message of caring for our planet, and move away from the culture of shaming that has become all too prevalent in our public dialogue.”
Full list of Members on the Caucus:
John Curtis (Utah-03); Energy and Commerce
Garrett Graves (Louisiana-06); Select Committee on Climate (Ranking Member), Transportation and Infrastructure, Natural Resources
Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Washington-05); Energy and Commerce (RM)
Bruce Westerman (Arkansas-04); Transportation and Infrastructure; Natural Resources (RM)
Glenn Thompson (Pennsylvania-15); Agriculture (RM), Education and Labor
Michael McCaul (Texas-10); Foreign Affairs (RM), Homeland Security
Frank Lucas (Oklahoma-03); Financial Services, Science, Space and Technology (RM)
Richard Hudson (North Carolina-08); Energy and Commerce, Republican Conference Secretary
David McKinley (West Virginia-01); Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee RM
Andy Barr (Kentucky-06); Financial Services, Foreign Affairs, Republican Study Steering Committee
Dan Newhouse (Washington-04); Appropriations, Western Caucus Chair
Burgess Owens (Utah-04); Education and Labor, Judiciary
Chris Stewart (Utah-02); Appropriations, Intelligence
Chuck Fleischmann (Tennessee-03); Appropriations
Cliff Bentz (Oregon-02); Natural Resources, Judiciary
Andrew Garbarino (New York-02) Homeland Security, Small Business
David Joyce (Ohio-14); Appropriations, Modernization, Ethics
Blake Moore (Utah-01); Armed Services, Natural Resources
David Valadao (California-21); Appropriations
Debbie Lesko (Arizona-08); Energy and Commerce
Doug Lamborn (Colorado-05); Natural Resources, Armed Services
Jeff Fortenberry (Nebraska-01); Appropriations
Jeff Van Drew (New Jersey-02); Transportation and Infrastructure, Homeland Security
Kelly Armstrong (North Dakota-AL); Energy and Commerce
Lee Zeldin (New York-01); Financial Services, Foreign Affairs
Mariannette Miller-Meeks (Iowa-02); Education and Labor, Veterans Affairs, Homeland Security
Mark Amodei (Nevada-02); Appropriations
Markwayne Mullin (Oklahoma-02); Energy and Commerce, Intelligence
Michael Burgess (Texas-26); Energy and Commerce, Rules
Michael Cloud (Texas-27); Oversight and Reform, Agriculture
Michael Waltz (Florida-06); Armed Services, Space, Science and Technology
Nancy Mace (South Carolina-01); Transportation and Infrastructure, Oversight and Reform, Veterans Affairs
Pat Fallon (Texas-04); Armed Services, Oversight and Reform
Peter Meijer (Michigan-03); Homeland Security, Foreign Affairs, Science, Space and Technology
Rick Crawford (Arkansas-01); Agriculture, Transportation and Infrastructure, Intelligence
Stephanie Bice (Oklahoma-05); Armed Services, Space, Science and Technology
Tim Burchett (Tennessee-02); Foreign Affairs, Transportation and Infrastructure
Tim Walberg (Michigan-07); Energy and Commerce, Education and Labor
Troy Balderson (Ohio-12); Agriculture, Transportation and Infrastructure
Robert Latta (Ohio-05); Energy and Commerce,
Chris Jacobs (New York-27); Agriculture, Budget
Michelle Steel (California-34); Transportation and Infrastructure; Education and Labor
Morgan Griffith (Virginia-09); Energy and Commerce
August Pfluger (Texas-11); Foreign Affairs, Homeland Security
Steven Palazzo (Mississippi-04); Appropriations
Dusty Johnson (South Dakota- AL); Agriculture, Transportation and Infrastructure
Jay Obernolte (California-08); Budget, Natural Resources, Space, Science and Technology
Larry Bucshon (Indiana-08); Energy and Commerce
Jim Baird (Indiana-04); Agriculture, Science Space and Technology
Jack Bergman (Michigan-01); Armed Services, Veteran’s Affairs
Maria Salazar (Florida-27); Foreign Affairs, Small Business
Tom Rice (South Carolina-07); Ways and Means
Anthony Gonzalez (Ohio-16); Financial Services, Science Space and Technology
Fred Keller (Pennsylvania-12); Education and Labor, Oversight and Reform
Randy Weber (Texas-14); Science, Space and Technology, Transportation and Infrastructure
French Hill (Arkansas-02); Financial Services
Bill Huizenga (Michigan-02); Financial Services
Fred Upton (Michigan-06); Energy and Commerce
Paul Gosar (Arizona-04); Natural Resources, Oversight and Reform
Mario Diaz-Balart (Florida-25); Appropriations
Drew Ferguson (Georgia-03); Ways and Means
Bryan Steil (Wisconsin-01); Administration, Financial Services
William Timmons (South Carolina-04); Financial Services, Steering
John Rutherford (Florida-04); Appropriations
Statements of Support
Heather Reams, Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions (CRES) Executive Director: “CRES applauds US Rep. John Curtis (R-UT) and the 51 other House Republicans who today announced the creation of the Conservative Climate Caucus and looks forward to working with Members and staff on its agenda. The climate is changing and to address it, our country needs a commonsense approach that works by reducing energy prices, not energy choices; shrinking our emissions, not our economy; and, exporting American innovation, not American jobs. Despite what fringe activists and their Capitol Hill champions say, overregulating America will not lower emissions globally. This caucus understands that climate change is a global issue. Today, 85 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions occur outside of the United States – a share that will increase to 90 percent by the end of the next decade. This means that U.S. climate and energy policy must foster innovation and commercialization pathways that work for Indiana as well as for India. Achieving emissions-reduction solutions are possible with the leadership demonstrated by the creation this caucus today.”
Rich Powell, ClearPath Executive Director: “Republicans have real solutions for climate change – ones that are technologically realistic, economically feasible, and politically sustainable. Over the past decade, conservatives have institutionalized big, bold goals anchored by clean energy breakthroughs as the best approach to solving the climate challenge. Higher taxes and more regulations won’t solve it – and this Conservative Climate Caucus will continue advancing solutions that strengthen the American economy, and reduce global carbon emissions.”
Background
The Caucus will be focused on educating Republican House Members on conservative climate solutions that align with Republican principles and are based on an agenda that will make real progress through American innovation and ultimately enhance American prosperity. Learn more HERE.
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