Short Wave - How Will Climate And Health Policy Look Under Biden?
Episode Date: December 31, 2020Today, something special...an episode of The NPR Politics Podcast we think you might appreciate. Our colleagues take a look at Joe Biden's approach to climate and health policy.His climate agenda will... look very different than President Trump's and even President Obama's. And, on top of responding to the pandemic, the president-elect will also have to wrangle all of the other problems in the American healthcare system.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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Coming up, we've got something special for you, an episode from the NPR Politics Podcast
about how climate and health policy might look under the incoming Biden administration.
Enjoy.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Aisha Roscoe.
I cover the White House.
I'm Scott Detrow.
I cover the Biden transition.
I'm Jennifer Ludden.
I edit energy and environment.
So Jennifer Ludden, you're here joining us.
Thanks so much for talking with us.
Hello.
Hello.
So Joe Biden has over and over emphasized climate as a central part of his administration.
We're going to get into what that really needs.
means. But first, let's start with what the last four years have looked like for climate policy,
because it really hasn't existed, right, Jennifer? Well, it's been very active sort of like
in the reverse. I mean, you know, after going from President Obama to Trump was like
whiplash and we're kind of heading, you know, reverse whiplash again, all those actions that
Obama took in eight years. We have seen dozens and dozens of role.
backs of them. You know, there was the Paris Climate Accord, of course, and then rules to bring down
carbon emissions in power plants, to make cars more fuel efficient, to, you know, restrict development of
wetlands and so forth. A lot of this has been challenged. You know, we've had a lot of court cases,
and the Trump administration has lost some of those, but some are ongoing. And, you know, another
maybe lasting climate legacy of President Trump will be all the conservative court appointees,
had, including three in the Supreme Court, which is where some of these contested rules may end up.
But to be frank, climate action has never really measured up to what scientists say we've needed,
right? It's we as a country have fallen short. True. I know. So much, you know, Obama had so many
fights about getting, you know, his measures passed and they're really inadequate. But I will say
so much has changed in the past four years. It's pretty remarkable. We have been sort of hanging out in
limbo or reverse, but the rest of the world and a lot of U.S. cities and states have just been on fast forward.
You have seen countries, cities, states, businesses, industry, utility companies
establish these incredibly ambitious goals of not only reducing carbon emissions, but trying to go for zero
carbon in the next few decades. This has been driven by, you know, a major shift in public opinion,
huge ramp up in extreme weather disasters. More Americans are feeling this viscerally in their lives,
the hurricanes, the fires, the heat. And so, you know, it's pretty clear that just bringing back
what Obama had managed to pass is not going to be nearly enough. And that's the way that
Biden talked about this throughout the campaign. And it's the way that the various advice,
and, you know, cabinet picks and cabinet level special positions has created are viewing this.
Like the overwhelming view of the people who will be setting policy is the world is on the clock.
The U.S. has wasted four years on this effort, and they need to radically overhaul the entire power
sector over a decade and a half and then keep going and totally transform the country's economy by 2050.
And that's basically due to almost the bare minimum of what is needed, according to,
experts to stave off the worst of a warming planet.
When you look at, you know, how you're going to deal with this issue, obviously you have
the power sector, which is the huge amount of the carbon comes from that.
You also have the transportation, the way we fuel our cars and trucks that comes from
fossil fuels.
What is Biden looking to do?
Is he going to phase out all coal?
We're going to go to all renewable energy.
We all know that, you know, the sun doesn't shine all the time, wind doesn't blow all the
time, how does that work? And then President Trump would always say, you know, I can't watch cable
because the wind's not blowing, honey. Some of these paths forward are more straightforward than
others, right? Like, just to take vehicles and emissions, that's an area where it is pretty
straightforward. And you have, I wouldn't even call it reluctant agreement, right, from a lot of big
auto manufacturers. Is that fair to say, Jennifer? Like, it's kind of like acceptance of
of like, yes, both in conjunction with states like California and the federal government,
which clearly has the right to do this, getting back on pace to having stricter emissions,
higher mileage standards.
So cars are using less gasoline and then hopefully sooner rather than later aren't using gasoline at all.
Yeah, no, they're on board because, you know, the world is moving in this direction.
It's pretty clear.
So, you know, they're quibbling over the details, but they see what's happening.
And then, you know, I think the interesting thing about the Biden administration is,
is that even beyond all these obvious things, I mean, it's like an all hands-on-deck approach,
you know, whole of government. They're going to try every way they can.
And you've seen Biden talk about climate with just about all of his nominees.
You know, he's like, oh, my trade representative, oh, she can really, you know,
address how extreme weather is affecting global supply chains.
Every, every aspect of this is how they're going to try and do it.
you know, housing can reduce emissions in all the publicly subsidized housing, housing it controls.
Agriculture, you can do farming practices that kind of keep the carbon in the soil.
It's like there's something for everyone, even, you know, Treasury, in the way you finance,
you know, there's an idea that maybe you could, you know, discourage fossil fuel investment.
And Janet Yellen, his pick for Treasury Secretary, she has spoken out about the need to reduce carbon emissions.
And, you know, obviously when we talk about climate, it's never,
just about one country because emissions don't, you know, care about borders or boundaries like that.
This is a global issue. So how is, is Biden going to try to deal with this on an international foreign
policy level? It's going to be a big part of what they're focusing on. And I think it ties with
Biden's main foreign policy goal of reengaging the U.S. with the world, right? He has made it clear
that one of the very first things he's going to do is rejoin the Paris Climate Accord.
He insists he's still going to have a big global climate summit in the first hundred days of his administration.
I was skeptical that could happen because of this whole pandemic thing, but Biden keeps talking about it and seems to be putting it forward.
But, you know, it's interesting. It ties into so many things that he'll be dealing with on so many fronts, like how to deal with China is going to be one of the biggest challenges of the Biden administration.
There are so many fronts where there is going to be a lot of tension with China.
There's going to be a lot of confrontation with China.
but this is an area where if Biden wants to try and help the world to get to the goals that are needed,
China needs to be on board and working with the U.S. to stop producing new coal power plants,
among many other things.
So that's going to be a top area.
And that's why you have Secretary of State Tony Blankin, if he's confirmed, but also a former Secretary of State, John Kerry,
who's going to focus only on this.
And we can expect he'll be spending a lot of time talking to Beijing.
All right.
So it sounds like another tricky thing that the Biden administration is going to have to tackle
and the fate of the world is in play.
So we'll just leave it there.
Just a low-key thing, you know.
All right, Jennifer, thank you so much for taking time out and talking to us.
Thank you.
And so we're going to take a quick break.
And then we're going to talk about health policy under Biden.
And we're back.
We're joined by health reporter Selena,
Simmons Duffin. How are you? I'm okay. I mean, I'm talking to two people with little kids, so
we're all in pretty much the same boatyard. Yes, so we may hear some kids in the background,
and they may not be mine this time, but probably are. We've got some bluey going in the
background here, and it's working well. Perfect. So obviously, the reason why we're home is
because there's this huge pandemic and managing that will define the first big
part of Biden's presidency. But health care is much more than just the pandemic. There's so much
more in the ways that it touches our lives. So I thought it would be worth just kind of diving into
that here. Let's start with who is on the team for Biden for health care? Well, he's picked
Javier Becerra, who's the Attorney General for California as his head of HHS, the Department of Health
and Human Services. And he has Dr. Rochelle Walensky coming in to run CDC. She is an infectious
disease doctor who's worked on HIV for most of her career. They're really well respected.
Javier Bacera doesn't have a health care background, but he's come up on my beat a lot because he
sued the Trump administration many times over the ACA. And the ACA is the Affordable Care Act.
Yes. He also has a really star-studded team to advise him on COVID. His picks so far on the
care front have been pretty well received. I think that his HHS pick, Havier Bacera,
might face some resistance in the Senate, but we'll have to see about that. But the big thing with
Bacera is that, you know, as you mentioned, that he has, you know, done lawsuits kind of protecting
the Affordable Care Act. How is Biden thinking about, you know, that law, that signature law going
forward. You know, it's interesting. This was like the dominant issue of that enormous Democratic
primary. We spent all of 2019, particularly after every debate, talking endlessly about, you know,
candidates who wanted to do away with it to have a whole public option, government-run health
care type program, Biden defending the Affordable Care Act. That, because of so many things have happened,
obviously the pandemic being first among them, changing the ACAs kind of dropped from that very top tier
of things that Biden wants to deal with. It's still important, but there's other stuff in the way as well.
Obviously, if the court did throw part of that out, that would change things, and Biden would be
trying to pass some sort of new ACA with Congress, a evenly divided Congress no matter what happens in Georgia.
But I think it's fair to say that even just being an administration that values the ACA, that
values the exchanges, that will make a big difference. Like I'm thinking, Selena, of how the Trump
administration, just like by and large didn't even advertise the market.
when there was open enrollment to try and increase enrollment in them.
Yeah, they slashed funding for advertising open enrollment by 90 percent and also cut back on the
support that's available for people who are signing up.
There were free navigators who would help people who were trying to pick a plan,
kind of go through that process.
It's really complicated.
It's hard to pick an insurance plan.
And so having people available free of charge to kind of go.
guide people through it was really key. And Biden has said that he would restore that funding and
really support the ACA. Outside of even just the Affordable Care Act, you now have, you know,
other issues like the cost of medication, things of that nature. What can be done, you know,
via executive action on this issue? Because this is an area where the Trump administration was very
active, right? Well, the Trump administration tried. I mean, Trump, President Trump, really
railed against how Americans pay more for their drugs than people in other countries do. And that's
true. I mean, we pay a lot for prescription drugs. The Democrats put their flag in the sand on
this issue by passing HR3 last year. It gave the Secretary of HHS the ability to negotiate over the
cost of drugs in Medicare. And that would have.
a huge impact on the whole market beyond people in Medicare if the government was able to say,
you know, we have leverage, we have buying power to the pharmaceutical industry, we want to pay
this for this drug and not more. Republicans say that is government price setting. That's not
negotiation and it's a non-starter. Both Biden and Trump have expressed support for importing drugs
from Canada, but that's another idea that just seems like kind of a weird workaround for
actually dealing with what the costs of drugs are here and working with drug companies to
bring the costs down. And I'm interested to see how this all plays out in the context of COVID,
because you have pharmaceutical companies. I mean, Moderna and Pfizer are on the tips of everyone's
tongues because they are the creators of these vaccines that are hopefully going to end the pandemic.
Pharma had a really, really bad reputation before the pandemic. I mean, the public perceptions of
the pharmaceutical industry was just in the pits. And so I'm really interested to see how
the pandemic changes the pharmaceutical industry's leverage to be able to push back on some of
these ideas. All right. So let's leave it there. Selina,
Thank you so much for stopping by virtually or whatever this is called now.
Thanks for having me.
Yes.
Thank you for sharing our your insights.
I'm Aisha Roscoe.
I cover the White House.
And I'm Scott Detrow.
I cover the Biden transition.
Thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.
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