Congress Unlikely to OK Obama’s New Clean Energy Bid

President Barack Obama said Saturday that he will ask the Republican-led Congress to double spending on research and development into clean energy by 2020. But the request is unlikely to be fulfilled.
Congress Unlikely to OK Obama’s New Clean Energy Bid
President Barack Obama speaks about the economy at a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 5, 2016. AP Photo/Susan Walsh
|Updated:

WASHINGTON—President Barack Obama said Saturday that he will ask the Republican-led Congress to double spending on research and development into clean energy by 2020. But the request is unlikely to be fulfilled.

GOP lawmakers scoff at the science behind climate change and dismiss Obama’s pleas for the issue to be dealt with urgently. In an unusual twist in Obama’s final year in office, the Republican leaders of the House and Senate budget committees have said they will not hold a customary hearing on the president’s budget proposal the day after they receive it.

Obama on Tuesday plans to send to Congress the spending blueprint for the budget year that begins Oct. 1. The release will come on the day when New Hampshire voters get their say in the first presidential primary of the 2016 race to succeed him.

“Rather than subsidize the past, we should invest in the future,” Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address, outlining his wish for the increased spending.

Rather than subsidize the past, we should invest in the future.
Barack Obama, president, U.S.