Australia Chooses Deadly Heat, A Dying Reef And Delicious, Wonderful Coal In Election [View all]
SYDNEY, Australia The polls said this would be Australias climate change election, when voters confronted harsh reality and elected leaders who would tackle the problem. And in some districts, it was true: Tony Abbott, the former prime minister who stymied climate policy for years, lost to an independent who campaigned on the issue. A few other new candidates prioritizing climate change also won.
But over all, Australians shrugged off the warming seas killing the Great Barrier Reef and the extreme drought punishing farmers. On Saturday, in a result that stunned most analysts, they re-elected the conservative coalition that has long resisted plans to sharply cut down on carbon emissions and coal. What it could mean is that the worlds climate wars already raging for years are likely to intensify. Left-leaning candidates elsewhere, like Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada, may learn to avoid making climate a campaign issue, while here in Australia, conservatives face more enraged opponents and a more divided public.
There has to be a reckoning within the coalition about where they stand, said Amanda McKenzie, chief executive of the Climate Council, an Australian nonprofit. I think its increasingly difficult for them to maintain a position where they dont talk about climate change. Even for skeptics, the effects of climate change are becoming harder to deny. Australia just experienced its hottest summer on record. The countrys tropics are spreading south, bringing storms and mosquito-borne illnesses like dengue fever to places unprepared for such problems, while water shortages have led to major fish die-offs in drying rivers.
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Despite his Sydney upbringing and former career in advertising, Mr. Morrison, 51, won in part by presenting himself as an Australian everyman a rugby-crazed beer drinker who was the first prime minister to campaign in a baseball hat. Mr. Morrisons coalition also benefited from deals with two right-wing groups: One Nation, the anti-immigration party led by the Queensland senator Pauline Hanson, and the United Australia Party led by the mining billionaire Clive Palmer, who spent tens of millions of dollars on a populist campaign with the slogan Make Australia Great.
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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/19/world/australia/election-climate-change.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fclimate&action=click&contentCollection=climate®ion=rank&module=package&version=highlights&contentPlacement=1&pgtype=sectionfront
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