The New York Times ran a piece Wednesday titled “From Electric Bikes to ‘Tree Equity,’ Biden’s Social Policy Bill Funds Niche Items,” in which the paper simply rehashed the longtime right-wing strategy of singling out individual items in larger federal bills — while downplaying the genuine benefits that they would provide.
“The Build Back Better Act’s marquee provisions have been the focus,” the sub-headline further added, “but Democrats have swept dozens of obscure measures and special interest breaks into the $1.85 trillion bill.” The Times missed the point here by simply leading with a standard right-wing framing, as well as not pointing out in any prominent way the dishonesty of the attacks from Republicans who have often championed some of their own “special interest breaks.”
For example, planting trees in neighborhoods where they’re scarce helps solve a genuine problem known as the heat island effect, which disproportionately impacts Black and brown communities. Indeed, as reporter Jonathan Weisman could have learned from reading his own newspaper, decades of racism in housing policy have left minority communities with fewer trees and the environmental benefits they bring.
This legacy of past discrimination has real consequences in the present. Communities without sufficient canopy cover can reach temperatures up to 10 degrees higher than those that do, while the presence of healthy trees near roads would help filter out pollution. And surely, as the country recovers from the pandemic, there ought to be a newfound perspective on the importance of public health as a component of a functioning economy.
But the article explained none of these subtleties — only mentioning the general usage of trees for carbon capture — and shifted the blame to Democrats: “Because Democrats used the buzz phrase ‘tree equity’ to describe it, Senate Republicans singled out the $2.5 billion provision in a memo as one of the questionable ‘earmarks for Democrat interests and allies.’”
Fox News has broadcast those Republican attacks as part of a campaign against the bill’s environmental provisions. For example, on the September 27 edition of Fox’s purported “news”-side program America’s Newsroom, co-anchor Bill Hemmer boasted to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) that the network had “found some doozies in the bill” such as tree planting. (Anchor Harris Faulkner also mocked the clause, saying that “it’s important that the trees feel equal to one another,” ignoring that the bill would help actual people.)
And now, The New York Times has put the attack in its headline, without sufficient explanation of what exactly the clause is or how the right-wing circles are dishonestly attacking it.