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NickB79

(19,233 posts)
Fri May 3, 2019, 04:48 PM May 2019

GOP warms to idea of a climate change policy

https://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/2019/0503/GOP-warms-to-idea-of-a-climate-change-policy

Increasingly, lawmakers who had called climate change into question or framed it as highly uncertain are bluntly naming it a real problem. And others who had not been so dismissive, like Ms. Murkowski, are ramping up efforts to act on the issue.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., is calling for a “new Manhattan Project” on energy. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., is trying to rally his colleagues to create a Republican plan to contrast with Democrats’ Green New Deal. And in the House, the GOP’s leading voice on a new climate change committee is Rep. Garret Graves, who speaks on the issue with an urgency linked to his experiences in the bayous and wetlands of Louisiana.


The problems are getting too big to ignore, even for the ignorant.
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GOP warms to idea of a climate change policy (Original Post) NickB79 May 2019 OP
Interesting! Think someone(s) are getting to L. Graham? elleng May 2019 #1
In a Switch, Some Republicans Start Citing Climate Change as Driving Their Policies OKIsItJustMe May 2019 #2
GOP warms to idea of harnessing lip service to continued delay hatrack May 2019 #3

OKIsItJustMe

(19,938 posts)
2. In a Switch, Some Republicans Start Citing Climate Change as Driving Their Policies
Sat May 4, 2019, 07:38 PM
May 2019
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/30/climate/republicans-climate-change-policies.html
In a Switch, Some Republicans Start Citing Climate Change as Driving Their Policies

By Lisa Friedman
April 30, 2019

WASHINGTON — When John Barrasso, a Republican from oil and uranium-rich Wyoming who has spent years blocking climate change legislation, introduced a bill this year to promote nuclear energy, he added a twist: a desire to tackle global warming.

Mr. Barrasso’s remarks — “If we are serious about climate change, we must be serious about expanding our use of nuclear energy” — were hardly a clarion call to action. Still they were highly unusual for the lawmaker who, despite decades of support for nuclear power and other policies that would reduce planet-warming emissions, has until recently avoided talking about them in the context of climate change.

The comments represent an important shift among Republicans in Congress. Driven by polls showing that voters in both parties — particularly younger Americans — are increasingly concerned about a warming planet, and prodded by the new Democratic majority in the House shining a spotlight on the issue, a growing number of Republicans are now openly discussing climate change and proposing what they call conservative solutions.

“Denying the basic existence of climate change is no longer a credible position,” said Whit Ayers, a Republican political consultant, pointing out the growing climate concern among millennials as well as centrist voters — two groups the G.O.P. will need in the future.

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