In a conversation with Moyers & Company‘s Michael Winship earlier this year, however, Klein argued that revenue neutrality “leaves the government with nothing”:

“‘Revenue-neutral’ carbon pricing was a scheme built for 1986 when we could cross our fingers and hope a slowly rising price for carbon would transition our economy off fossil fuels. But in 2016 we have years, not decades.”
—Jill Mangaliman, Got Green

Indeed, a local climate activist also argued in a recent op-ed that “‘[r]evenue-neutral’ carbon pricing was a scheme built for 1986 when we could cross our fingers and hope a slowly rising price for carbon would transition our economy off fossil fuels. But in 2016 we have years, not decades, before we’ve maxed out our global carbon budget to stay below a 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius rise in temperature. I-732 would contribute virtually nothing to Washington’s share.”

As the November election approaches, Klein wrote on Twitter that British Columbia “has a carbon tax like the one being proposed [in Washington] and emissions are still going up. I’m convinced it’s worth fighting for better.”

Supporters of the measure, however, counter such criticism by arguing that the reduction of the state’s sales tax—a so-called “regressive tax” that affects poor people disproportionately—would help Washington’s low-income communities.

“I-732 will ensure that those most impacted will receive the most financial relief,” wrote climate scientist Richard Gammon in YES! Magazine. “It makes the money polluters pay to lower the state sales tax a full percentage point, which benefits everyone. It lowers some business taxes to keep jobs in the state, and it invests $1 billion over the first six years in direct checks of up to $1,500 annually to 460,000 low-income working families through a 25 percent match of the federal Earned Income Tax Credit.”

Proponents have also argued that the revenue-neutral carbon tax is business-friendly, meaning the initiative will pass more easily—and that the current measure is better than nothing, as the urgency of the climate crisis only grows. (Although there is one industry that is battling the initiative: coal.)

“Global warming is such an immediate threat that it needs the forceful mechanism of a clear, continuously reducing cap that will, without the unpredictability, political vulnerability, and extra cost of a tax program, chop carbon emissions at a quick and predictable pace,” argued a former Interior Department official in a letter to the editor in the New York Times.

The unusual battle over what would be the nation’s first carbon tax, which has the fossil fuel industry on the same side as some of North America’s most prominent climate activists, has perhaps been overshadowed by the pitched and often ugly presidential election. Yet those wondering about the future of climate legislation in the country are watching the fight closely, and it remains to be seen what the outcome will be as the most recent polls show the opposition with a slim lead and about a third of respondents undecided.

As Gregg Small of the Washington-based Climate Solutions told Grist: “Carbon pricing is incredibly difficult and maybe impossible if people don’t come together. Other states will face similar types of dynamics here on the policy and strategy. I hope people learn from the painful lesson we have in Washington to, you know, work it out.”

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