GOP relabels energy policy to call it 'climate plan'
By Liam Denning / Bloomberg Opinion
Congressional Republicans have partly unveiled their plan to save the planet. Beginning with roughly 190,000 square miles of it.
Thats the total area of the 31 most vulnerable Democratic districts heading into Novembers midterms, as judged by the Cook Political Report. They skew, like most blue districts, toward cities and suburbs, with 21 rated rural-suburban or higher in the Bloomberg CityLabs Congressional Density Index. Only two are designated as pure rural. This, in turn, correlates with popular support for climate policy in most of these districts. On average, 61.2 percent of Americans living in them think Congress should do more to address climate change, according to polling by the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication. Thats a hair higher than the national average, which also shows a clear majority in favor.
This math suggests its a no-brainer for Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy to add a tint of green to his platform. Except, of course, the Republican base tends to skew more rural and, especially, skeptical about climate change. Thats in part because former President Donald Trump called it a Chinese hoax, and few things matter more to todays Republican Party very much including McCarthy than being seen to agree vociferously with Trump. Its a quandary, all right.
Still, even if he haunts the midterms, Trump isnt on the ballot, and you dont get to be speaker of the House by winning districts you already hold. So it makes sense to offer a greenish olive branch to persuadable types in those shaky blue suburbs.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-gop-relabels-energy-policy-to-call-it-climate-plan/