It is a long post. Just read the parts that seem interesting to you.
I am a member of a non-partisan volunteer organization called the Citizens Climate Lobby (CCL) which seeks to create political will for a livable future. At one point I was quite skeptical and doubtful of global warming or climate change or climate disruption whatever you like to call it. The reason was that I almost exclusively read and watched rightwing news media such as world-net-daily (tended to push conspiracy theories), Newsmax and Fox News.
I believed in the concept of global warming / greenhouse effect, it is basic science after all, but I thought that it was exaggerated and politicized and that it was promoted and distorted by left-wing agendas. I incorrectly believed that there was no scientific consensus on the issue. I also bought into the false narrative that this was about environmentalist ideology, politics, or even a sort of environmentalist religion, and not a real and serious problem. My disdain for environmentalists, my ideology, and my gut feelings certainly aided the propaganda in misleading me. In addition, I read a lot by Björn Lomborg and Patrick J. Michaels and I believed them.
After noticing a few red flags indicating that I was wrong I decided to take a deep dive into the topic, and I learned quite a bit. I learned that global warming / climate change, as well as ocean acidification is real and that it is caused by us, primarily because of our burning of fossil fuels. It helped that I had a background in physics. You can read more about my journey here.
I joined CCL because I had been so wrong, at the same time as I felt that I had finally learned something substantial about the subject, that the topic is important, and I also liked that CCL is non-partisan.
As the name Citizens Climate Lobby suggests we do a lot of lobbying. It is not the kind of paid lobbying that is done by professionals and that is often associated with money. We are average constituents, average voters, with no money, who are visiting our legislators to give them information and opinions on legislation we support or don’t support. Since we are non-partisan, we visit both Democrats and Republican offices. We just had a CCL conference in Washington DC on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. We were 800+ volunteers who visited 400+ Congressional offices in Washington DC on Tuesday July 22nd. That is why I have not been online much for about a week.

On Tuesday I visited three Texas Congressmen, including Senator Ted Cruz (R, TXJR), Congresswoman Beth Van Duyne (R, TX24), and Congressman Marc Veasey (D, TX33). We also had a zoom call with Congressman John Carter’s (R, TX31) office (the fourth meeting). I am the CCL liaison for Senator Cruz’ office and I was the one who organized our visit, from our side. It was a brief visit with Senator Cruz and a substantial discussion with a couple of his staff. Ted Cruz does not always agree with us, but we had a friendly and interesting meeting, and he and his staff appreciated us being there. Below I have included three photos from my three Tuesday meetings.

Ted Cruz is standing in the back between the flags. I am in the front row, second from the right wearing a blue suit. We are twelve people.


Overview of the Five Asks
With this post I wanted to show our Asks, so that readers know what we ask from our politicians. I do not expect anyone to read the CCL handouts below. I am including them to illustrate how we approach legislation. Don’t worry about the details. Trust me, the actual bills are even longer (the poor staffers of the politicians must read it). I can add that our Vice President of Government Affairs (CCL employee), Jennifer Tyler, was the Deputy Chief of Staff and Legislative Director for the Republican Congressman John Katko (NY-24). Having been a prominent leader in the Republican Party she is able to craft legislative Asks that not only appeal to Democrats but to Republicans as well.
I can add that CCL has a small staff consisting of highly educated people including climate scientists and policy experts. The CCL board features prominent climate scientists and prominent politicians and economists. George W. Schulz, Ronald Reagan’s Secretary of State, was (well is as an honorary member) on the CCL board but he passed away. I also think that CCL volunteers tend to be more nerdy than average. A lot of our volunteers are scientists, physicians, brain surgeons, engineers, PhDs, psychologists, authors, artists, businessmen, business owners, oil executives, etc., but naturally everyone is welcome. We are a well-informed volunteer organization and as a result both Democratic and Republican offices see us as a great resource for information and ideas.
These were our six Asks. As you can see, not all of them apply to both parties. One Ask is only for Republicans because Democrats are already fully onboard. One Ask is only for Democrats because the Republicans are already fully onboard. Another Ask is only for Republicans because there’s no chance Democrats will support it (but Republicans have more votes). In other words, an emissions and pollution reducing mix of Asks that overall is bipartisan.
- Support the Clean Energy Transition – Fund Key Clean Energy Programs in FY26 Appropriations – Democrats + Republicans.
- Support the Clean Energy Transition – Fix Clean Energy Tax Credit Implementation – Republicans only, because Democrats are already full onboard.
- Support the Clean Energy Transition – Advance Smart Permitting Reform for Energy Projects – Democrats + Republicans but different handouts.
- Support H.R. 471, the Bipartisan Fix Our Forests Act – Democrats only because Republicans already fully onboard.
- Support S. 1462, the Bipartisan Fix Our Forests Act – Democrats + Republicans.
- Support Foreign Pollution Tariff Legislation – Republicans only, because we know Democrats are against it.
Funding Clean Energy Research
Fund Key Clean Energy Programs in FY26 Appropriations was the first part of three parts for our primary Ask : Support the Clean Energy Transition. The 2025 Budget Reconciliation Bill (One Big Beautiful Bill) cuts funding from two research organizations, the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) and the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA-E). ARPA by the way is a prominent research organization, it is, for example, responsible for the creation of the internet. The reason we are asking to restore some of the funding for these organizations is because the world is moving towards clean energy and recently China has aggressively invested in clean energy. Cutting research in this area is a recipe for getting behind.
Clean Energy Tax Credits
The Clean Energy Tax Credits were significantly cut in the Budget Reconciliation Bill. It was specifically provision 48E, investment credits for wind and solar, 45Y, tax credits for wind and solar, 25C, tax credits for home efficiency improvements, such as insulation, energy efficient doors and windows, etc., that were cut. I should say that the 48E and 45Y for other types of clean energy, such as Nuclear, Geothermal, Hydro, and Biofuels, stayed, which we are grateful for.
The reason we are asking to restore some of the tax credits for wind and solar, is not that they need the tax credits to survive. Wind and solar energy are very cheap, and they are doing very well. However, they are prominent sources of clean energy and removal of the tax credits will significantly increase the energy cost for consumers, as you can see in the graph below. The loss of the credits will also result in the loss of jobs and investments in projects already underway. A list of the effected investments and projects in the US listed per congressional district can be seen in this link. Since virtually all Democrats already support the restoration of the clean energy tax/investment credits, we are only asking this from Republicans. Admittedly this is a tough one for them.
Smart Permitting Reform for Energy Projects
The third part of the Primary Ask is Smart Permitting Reform for Energy Projects. What many people don’t realize is that what is holding clean energy back the most is not the cost or time for building wind and solar. That is relatively easy. The big obstacle is getting permits to build the energy plants and permits to build transmission lines needed to bring the electricity to our homes. In both cases the process is typically at least ten years. However, by cutting red tape and streamlining the process it could be reduced to around a year.
This applies not only to wind and solar but to all types of energy, which is why Republicans tend to support permitting reform. Since most of the new energy coming online is wind and solar, and they often replace dirty coal, thus reducing emissions, we strongly support permitting reform. We have done the research, so we know that this is a very good way to reduce emissions. In this case we formulated the Ask differently for Republicans and Democrats.
Primary Asks Sheets




Fix Our Forest Act
Our first Secondary Ask is Support H.R. 471, the Bipartisan Fix Our Forests Act, when it Comes Back to the House. To explain, it was voted on in the house, sent to the Senate where they made some changes, so it needs to be voted on again in the house. This is an Ask that we reserved for Democrats. It was not because we thought Republicans wouldn’t like it but because they had already voted Yes for it unanimously. We know the Republicans like it. However, we needed to make sure the Democrats who were less favorable of it would not turn against it, which is why we are asking them to vote yes on it.
To explain what the bill is about, scientists have concluded that climate change and poor forest management are both making wildfires worse, at least in the United States. Out of control wildfires in turn make climate change worse. Climate change will take several decades to fix and requires the whole world to act. However, improving forest management we can do today for ourselves. To read the full text of the original house bill click here. To read the full text of the Senate version of the bill (S.1462) click here.


Foreign Pollution Fee
The Foreign Pollution Fee Act S.1325 (full text in link) was introduced in the Senate by Senator Lindsey Graham (R). This is a resolution that if it becomes law would greatly reduce carbon emissions around the world, and yet it is pretty much only supported by Republicans. It might come as a surprise that there is a pro-climate resolution that’s almost entirely Republican, but it happens sometimes. Our goal is to get close to unanimous Republican support and with the help of a few moderate Democrats get it passed.
Some background, China emits more carbon pollution than any country on earth. On the other hand, there are 1.4 billion people in China and per capita they emit only half that of the United States, which comes in at number two with respect to total emissions. In addition, the United States is the country that has emitted the most carbon emissions over time. On the other hand, the US emissions are going down, unlike China’s, and more importantly in this context, certain products such as steel, aluminum, fossil fuels, etc., are produced creating a lot more emissions in China than in the US, which has cleaner manufacturing. For example, one ton of steel produced in China or Russia result in four times as much carbon emissions as the same ton of steel produced in the US. It is not fair to cleaner US manufacturers to import products from dirty manufacturers without taking into account the cost of pollution to all of us.

Washington DC Congressional Buildings
The congressional buildings are the three buildings that are part of the house of representatives, Rayburn, Longworth, and Cannon, and the three Senate buildings, Russel, Dirksen and Hart. I encircled them in red in the map below. If you are visiting several offices, there is going to be a lot of walking. Therefore, women should bring a comfortable pair of shoes in a backpack in addition to nice shoes for inside the buildings.
I can add that the offices in Rayburn are bigger and nicer than the offices in Longworth and Cannon, and Rayburn has the main nice cafeteria. Longtime congressman tends to have their offices in Rayburn. The same is true for the Senate. Russel has the nicest offices and the best cafeteria, and the long-time Senators tend to be in Russel. Ted Cruz is in Russel 167. He has a great office.

In case you are interested, this is the full text of the 2025 Reconciliation Budget Bill H.R.1. The nickname for the bill is One Big Beautiful Bill. Warning, it is very big. Beautiful is a matter of opinion.
My Super Fact List
This is not a super fact post. Just an informational post. If you want to see my list of super facts, click the link below.
Good luck with your work on this project, Thomas.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much Lynette
LikeLiked by 1 person
Very hopeful, Thomas. While deafening noise batters us, you and your team quietly create paths of reason that offer a chance for positive change. Thank you!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much for your very kind words Gwen
LikeLike
Hi Thomas, I am starting to learn some of your politicians names from these posts and the ones on FB. Mike Veasey is one I recognise. An important agenda and an admirable way to make a contribution to the planet.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Here in Texas our Senators are John Cornyn and Ted Cruz and then we have 38 House Representatives / Congressmen. Mine is Beth Van Duyne (R) TX24. Here in Dallas there is also Julie Johnson (D) TX-32, Marc Veasey (D) TX33, Jasmine Crocket (D) TX30, Brandon Gill (R) TX26, Roger Williams (R) TX25, Craig Goldman (R) TX12 and a few more. Each congressman has about 700,000 constituents and Dallas Fort Worth had 8 million people. I met with Ted Cruz, Beth Van Duyne and Marc Veasey.
On a good note. The Inflation Reduction Act contained a lot things that were good for climate, especially the Clean Energy Tax Credits, but it was a highly partisan bill that passed (in 2022) with one vote. It was expected to be rolled back but they did not roll back everything, which means that if you take the perspective starting 2021 then we have actually made significant progress on reducing emissions. In CCL we are just trying to make it better, and we may have stopped the 25% excise tax on clean energy that was almost passed in the OBBB but wasn’t. We were making thousands of phonecalls and they took it out.
LikeLike
We’ve got to remain hopeful I guess. It’s hard to make people listen and act with reason and facts in an age where lies and spin are ruling the minds of those who are so cheaply swayed. Who makes the mist noise, wins etc. I admire your courage, Thomas.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, you are right. We are living in an age of misinformation, partisanship, conspiracy theories all kinds of crazy stuff. On the other hand, as I just noted in the comment above. The clean energy tax credits were included in a very partisan bill (Democrats only) so it was shaky to begin with. Then with the OBBB (One Big Beautiful Bill) they rolled that back but not all of it, which means that since 2021 we have actually made progress. Today a Republican introduced a Permitting Reform bill, which is something we asked for. Also the OBBB could have been much worse. At first they were going to add a 25% excise tax on all clean energy. We made thousands of phone calls and then they took that back out. So we have some progress still, depending on your perspective. Thank you so much Leighton.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thomas, it’s good to know that you and your fellow climate lobbyists are working on this problem. Thanks for the information in this post!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much Audrey. Yes I think we’ve had a few successes.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow. Good for you, and what an adventure!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much Ilsa. It is fun.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It seems your group is making some inroads, Thomas, and that is encouraging.
Intelligence is a formidable weapon, and I believe the nerds will save the world! 💪
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much Debbie. I think you are right. Once the congressmen get to know us it seems like we are always welcome back. Except for the new congressmen/women they all seem to know who we are and some of them have been keynote speakers at our conferences, such as Senator Whitehouse (Democrat Rhode Island) and Senator John Curtis (Republican, Utah). According to our Vice President of Government Affairs, Jennifer Tyler (She is a policy expert) we were instrumental in avoiding the 25% excise tax on renewables, which was proposed in the OBBB. We made thousands of phone calls, wrote letters and emails, and wrote to newspapers.
LikeLike
And about nerds. I should say it is our climate scientist (and physicist) Dana Nuccitelli, and policy experts Daniel Ricther and Jennifer Tyler, and a few more, who collect the data, finds studies by reliable research organizations, and figure out good policy. Sometimes we have suggested policies, but most of the time we just pick the best ones to support. And 230,000 group of more or less nerdy people armed with google help with suggestions that we give to Dana, Daniel and Jennifer. Because we always condense complicated bills to understandable short versions, and backup our claims about the policies with good research, the congressional offices love the information we give them.
LikeLike
What an extraordinary tour, Thomas. Best of luck with your work on this very important project.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you so much for your kind words Patricia
LikeLiked by 1 person
A versecraft share
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much Swamigalkodi
LikeLike
Hi 👋 Thomas, what a cool adventure, 😎 and a great project! That yall.are doing! I’m sure yall will make some progress 😀 have a good day
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much for your kind words Anna
LikeLiked by 1 person
You’re doing a great job of sharing information about climate change. I think talking to people in a rational way regardless of their beliefs really helps much more than arguing. That gets us nowhere.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much Pooja and you are so right. Exchanging information rationally is much better than arguing.
LikeLiked by 1 person
You’re welcome and yes exactly, much more productive.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I can add that in offices where we know that the people rather not hear the word climate change or global warming or pollution, we focus on economic benefits and grid reliability, which a lot of clean energy related bills provide.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That’s nice, it’s best to meet people half way.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes I agree with you
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for taking a deeper dive into your research and for you good work with Citizens Climate Lobby!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much for your kind words JoAnna
LikeLike
Java Bean: “Ayyy, whew, for a minute there we thought CCL was ‘cranial cruciate ligament’, which can be a big problem for us dogs, and we were worried about you having an ‘adventure’ with it!”
LikeLiked by 1 person
You are Java Bean, CCL is also the Cranial Cruciate Ligament, a very important CCL. CCL can be many things but we should not forgot the one important to dogs.
LikeLike
If the Democrats had approached Climate Change and Clean Energy in a more positive and rational way, there would not be so much resistance. But they chose to try and force their agenda on everyone in the country, which Americans don’t like. Americans rejected the electric car mandate. The EV credits raised the cost of an EV to unaffordable levels. The charging stations were not in place or maintained. They tried to rush the whole thing with a heavy fist, and people rebelled. Plus, they let nuts like AOC control the narrative and claim that everybody was going to die in ten or twelve years. People blew it off. Any attempt to force people into anything will backfire. The Democrats blew it. Good luck convincing people now. You might say that the message killed the messenger. But I applaud your efforts. It’s just as difficult trying to get local politicians to deal with the water problem. They all have dollar signs in their eyes, but it’s the ordinary people who suffer.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes I know, there is a lot of blame to go around on both sides. I agree with many things you are saying.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Appreciate the effort put into this. It’s always good to see quality content.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for your kind words last war top up
LikeLike