By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent
What Happened: So Reuters reported this morning that solar companies are setting large piles of cash on fire in their parking lots…oh, I’m sorry, I misspoke. They’re actually funding Republicans. Wait, maybe I was right in the first place.
SolarWakeup’s View: It has long been a pet peeve of mine that the solar industry seems hellbent on playing nice with politicians who, given the opportunity, would completely destroy the solar industry on a heartbeat’s notice.
After all, it’s not state legislatures led by Democrats that are trying to gut net metering and other pro-solar policies around the country. And while it’s true solar is a popular issue among the voters, anyone who thinks voters get to weigh in on what these politicians are voting on doesn’t understand democracy (small “d”) in the United States in 2018.
Which is why Reuters’ report that the solar industry has decided to provide more money to Republicans than Democrats this cycle just makes my head want to explode. Here are the details:
Overall, political action committees representing solar and wind companies have donated nearly $400,000 to candidates and PACs in the 2018 election cycle, including $247,000 to Republicans, $139,300 to Democrats, and $7,500 to independents, according to the Reuters analysis.
That marks a record. During the 2016 presidential elections, the first cycle during which the clean energy industry gave more to the GOP than to Democrats, Republicans received just over half of the combined $695,470 in political contributions from major wind and solar PACs.
To which I scream (startling the dog in the process): “WHY?”
Look, I’m no political naif. I’ve been steeped in politics since the age of 6, when I supposedly wanted to vote for my “Uncle Carty” for president (my Uncle Carty – a nickname – was not running for president, but a former peanut farmer named Jimmy CARTER was). I’ve been heavily involved in politics ever since, up to and including local politics. I’ve watched the sausage get made, and I do not have a weak stomach.
But in politics as in business, I’m all about return on investment, and outside of an ITC extension in 2015 (and we can debate how much of that was the result of fawning over Republicans at some other date), what has this “investment” gotten us? Wouldn’t it make far more sense to invest in politicians who might actually SUPPORT our priorities instead of merely NOT ACTIVELY OPPOSING them?
For reals – it’s time for us to get our priorities in order and support those who support us wholeheartedly without reservation. Otherwise, you’re just throwing good money after bad.
More:
Clean energy sector swings Republican with U.S. campaign donations