[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 17, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S331-S333]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CLIMATE CHANGE
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, in my ``Time to Wake Up'' climate
speech--this is No. 154--I sometimes feel as if I am out here banging
hopelessly against a tightly locked, barred, and soundproofed door. I
make them anyway because, at a minimum, I want history to know what
happened here when people look back and ask what the hell went wrong
with American democracy. But I do admit that it can sometimes be
discouraging.
However, last week something important happened. A public servant won
a victory against a massive special interest. A court in Massachusetts
allowed the attorney general of that Commonwealth to obtain files and
records from the ExxonMobil corporation about its climate denial
enterprise.
That is great news, and it is an important event. There is virtually
universal scientific consensus--and even alarm--about climate and
oceanic changes caused by burning the fossil fuel industry's products.
In the face of that concern, the fossil fuel industry has gone to the
mattresses to defend its business model. It is defending what the
International Monetary Fund has described as a $700 billion--billion
with a ``b''--annual subsidy just in the United States.
To defend a prize of that magnitude, the industry has set up an array
of front groups to obscure its hand and to
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propagate fake science designed to raise doubts about the real thing.
With that fake science, they dupe the public and provide talking points
for their political operatives. The front groups are a tentacled Hydra
named after everyone from Cato to Madison, Jefferson, and Franklin, to
George C. Marshall. The resemblances between this fossil fuel climate
denial operation and the tobacco fraud scheme are profound, and these
resemblances are noted often, including by the lawyer who won the
tobacco case. Yes, the Department of Justice won that case.
At the same time, the fossil fuel industry has taken advantage of the
political weaponry handed to them by five Republican appointees on the
Supreme Court. This industry has used the unprecedented political power
bestowed on mighty special interests by the Citizens United decision to
extirpate--root out--any Republican support for climate action. When I
got here, there was plenty of Republican support for climate action,
but after Citizens United that changed. They have seized that party
like a hostile political takeover and turned the Republican Party into
the fossil fuel industry's political arm. It turns out that you can do
this on the cheap, compared to losing a subsidy of $700 billion a year.
This whole scheme reeks of mischief and self-interest, but in
political forums the industry is such a powerful behemoth that it can
block proper hearings, spout calculated misinformation, cloud up the
truth, lobby to its heart's content, refuse to answer questions, pile
up the spin doctors and front groups, buy and rent politicians, and
threaten to end careers of anyone who crosses them--and they do. They
made an example of Representative Bob Inglis and bragged of the
political peril--their words--that would result to those who crossed
them. That is how they play in the political branches. Truth doesn't
matter to them. Truth is their adversary.
But you cannot play that way in court. That is why last week's
victory was important. Court is different. In court you have to speak
truthfully. Your lawyers can be sanctioned for lying in court. In
court, your testimony is under oath, and you can be cross-examined. In
court, evidence can be demanded and must be produced. In court, you
cannot buy a judge's good will or bully a jury into compliance.
Tampering with the jury is a crime. Judges cannot meet secretly with
one side. No money can change hands, and biased judges must be recused.
Sir William Blackstone was the best-known jurist in England and
America at the time of the Revolution. Trial by jury, he said,
``preserves in the hands of the people that share which they ought to
have in the administration of public justice, and prevents the
encroachments of the more powerful and wealthy citizens.''
No wonder powerful and wealthy ExxonMobil wants no part of that. This
industry has gotten used to saying things with no accountability,
dodging the truth, hiding the evidence, and using the massive weight of
their political might to see to it that Congress has just the right
bias wherever fossil fuel interests are a concern.
This Massachusetts ruling is a chink of light--and a welcome one--as
darkness falls over an executive administration stuffed with nominees
from the climate denial fringe, wrapped tight in the political
tentacles of fossil fuel interests.
It makes the fossil fuel folks crazy to be called into court and to
have to stand annoyingly equal before the law when they are used to
being the big behemoth, able to tell everyone what to do or pay them or
threaten them to do what industry wants. That is why they launched
legislative subpoenas at attorneys general and what even Texas
newspapers have called out as unseemly abuse of government power.
That is why they rush to the oil patch for judges who will interfere
in investigations by attorneys general, even suggesting that attorneys
general should not pursue cases against corporations whom they believe
are responsible for misconduct because believing that is prejudicial.
Think of that. That is why the industry PR machine creates and
propagates magical theories about the industry's First Amendment
rights, when it is black letter law--admitted even by Senator Sessions
in his Judiciary Committee hearing--that the First Amendment ends where
fraud begins. Fraudulent speech, including fraudulent corporate speech,
is not protected by the First Amendment. It is not now, and it never
has been.
To clarify this point, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the
Record a June 2016 Washington Post op-ed by Yale Law School dean Robert
Post titled ``Exxon-Mobil is abusing the first amendment.''
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the Washington Post, June 24, 2016]
Exxon-Mobil Is Abusing the First Amendment
(By Robert Post)
Global warming is perhaps the single most significant
threat facing the future of humanity on this planet. It is
likely to wreak havoc on the economy, including, most
especially, on the stocks of companies that sell hydrocarbon
energy products. If large oil companies have deliberately
misinformed investors about their knowledge of global
warming, they may have committed serious commercial fraud.
A potentially analogous instance of fraud occurred when
tobacco companies were found to have deliberately misled
their customers about the dangers of smoking. The safety of
nicotine was at the time fiercely debated, just as the threat
of global warming is now vigorously contested. Because
tobacco companies were found to have known about the risks of
smoking, even as they sought to convince their customers
otherwise, they were held liable for fraud. Despite the
efforts of tobacco companies to invoke First Amendment
protections for their contributions to public debate, the
Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit found: ``Of course it
is well settled that the First Amendment does not protect
fraud.''
The point is a simple one. If large corporations were free
to mislead deliberately the consuming public, we would live
in a jungle rather than in an orderly and stable market.
ExxonMobil and its supporters are now eliding the essential
difference between fraud and public debate. Raising the
revered flag of the First Amendment, they loudly object to
investigations recently announced by attorneys general of
several states into whether ExxonMobil has publicly
misrepresented what it knew about global warming.
The National Review has accused the attorneys general of
``trampling the First Amendment.'' Post columnist George F.
Will has written that the investigations illustrate the
``authoritarianism'' implicit in progressivism, which seeks
``to criminalize debate about science.'' And Hans A. von
Spakovsky, speaking for the Heritage Foundation, compared the
attorneys general to the Spanish Inquisition.
Despite their vitriol, these denunciations are wide of the
mark. If your pharmacist sells you patent medicine on the
basis of his ``scientific theory'' that it will cure your
cancer, the government does not act like the Spanish
Inquisition when it holds the pharmacist accountable for
fraud.
The obvious point, which remarkably bears repeating, is
that there are circumstances when scientific theories must
remain open and subject to challenge, and there are
circumstances when the government must act to protect the
integrity of the market, even if it requires determining the
truth or falsity of those theories. Public debate must be
protected, but fraud must also be suppressed. Fraud is
especially egregious because it is committed when a seller
does not himself believe the hokum he foists on an unwitting
public.
One would think conservative intellectuals would be the
first to recognize the necessity of prohibiting fraud so as
to ensure the integrity of otherwise free markets.
Prohibitions on fraud go back to Roman times; no sane market
could exist without them.
It may be that after investigation the attorneys general do
not find evidence that ExxonMobil has committed fraud. I do
not prejudge the question. The investigation is now entering
its discovery phase, which means it is gathering evidence to
determine whether fraud has actually been committed.
Nevertheless, ExxonMobil and its defenders are already
objecting to the subpoena by the attorneys general, on the
grounds that it ``amounts to an impermissible content-based
restriction on speech'' because its effect is to ``deter
ExxonMobil from participating in the public debate over
climate change now and in the future.'' It is hard to
exaggerate the brazen audacity of this argument.
If ExxonMobil has committed fraud, its speech would not
merit First Amendment protection. But the company
nevertheless invokes the First Amendment to suppress a
subpoena designed to produce the information necessary to
determine whether ExxonMobil has committed fraud. It thus
seeks to foreclose the very process by which our legal system
acquires the evidence necessary to determine whether fraud
has been committed. In effect, the company seeks to use the
First Amendment to prevent any informed lawsuit for fraud.
But if the First Amendment does not prevent lawsuits for
fraud, it does not prevent subpoenas designed to provide
evidence necessary to establish fraud. That is why when a
libel plaintiff sought to inquire into the editorial
processes of CBS News and CBS
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raised First Amendment objections analogous to those of
ExxonMobil, the Supreme Court in the 1979 case Herbert v.
Lando unequivocally held that the Constitution does not
preclude ordinary discovery of information relevant to a
lawsuit, even with respect to a defendant news organization.
The attorneys general are not private plaintiffs. They
represent governments, and the Supreme Court has always and
rightfully been extremely reluctant to question the good
faith of prosecutors when they seek to acquire information
necessary to pursue their official obligations. If every
prosecutorial request for information could be transformed
into a constitutional attack on a defendant's point of view,
law enforcement in this country would grind to a halt.
Imagine the consequences in prosecutions against terrorists,
who explicitly seek to advance a political ideology.
It is grossly irresponsible to invoke the First Amendment
in such contexts. But we are witnessing an increasing
tendency to use the First Amendment to unravel ordinary
business regulations. This is heartbreaking at a time when we
need a strong First Amendment for more important democratic
purposes than using a constitutional noose to strangle basic
economic regulation.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, it makes this industry crazy to be in
court and to have to tell the truth, so they will fight desperately on.
The $700 billion a year in subsidies makes it profitable to ``lawyer
up'' by the boatload for this fight and to litigate to their damndest.
So this is not over, but this may be the moment when the truth finally
found a path around the ramparts of our well-kept congressional
indifference and began to find its way into the daylight.
That is one of the reasons the Founding Fathers gave us independent
courts and juries. ``Representative government and trial by jury are
the heart and lungs of liberty,'' wrote John Adams. Independent courts
and trial by jury were a big deal to the founding generation. The
Founding Fathers had a keen sense of history and of politics and of the
mischief of conniving men. They were deeply concerned about
corruption--corruption of the body politic by interests and factions.
They knew the Bible and had read Isaiah's warning of how ``the
faithful city has become a whore,'' with ``princes'' that are
``companions of thieves.'' They knew about abusive power. They could
envision an interest become so powerful as to overwhelm the executive
and legislative branches of government and bend those branches to its
will. They could envision a special interest so powerful that it could
buy its own presses and confuse or beguile the public with propaganda
and nonsense. They could envision special interests so powerful as to
abuse and distort the very democracy they were building.
So there stand the courts and there stands the jury, the places in
our system of government where money has no sway and where evidence,
testimony, and truth rule the day.
God bless America.
I yield the floor.
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