Climate change protesters interrupted a Democratic National Committee meeting ahead of the campaign arm's upcoming leadership election.
Candidates to lead the Democratic National Committee (DNC) doubled down on issues that poll poorly with voters while being shouted down by climate protestors during a Thursday candidate forum at Georgetown University in Washington,
Like their MAGA antagonists, progressive climate warriors exist in a political bubble where everyone thinks alike and scorns non-believers. Instead, they should put aside doom-crying, which makes the climate challenge sound insoluble, and try to assuage working Americans’ reasonable qualms about high fuel bills and shortages.
International climate finance has had a challenging start to 2025. One of President Donald Trump's first acts upon returning to the White House was to sign an executive order withdrawing the United States from the <a href=" Agreement.
The decisions that companies make about how much to grow oil production are first and foremost going to be determined by market signals.”
The same affordability concerns that swept President Donald Trump to office are keeping blue-state leaders from mounting a vigorous response to his dismantling of federal climate policies.
"The impacts of the climate crisis are also worsening ... Trump's previous withdrawal took effect the day after the 2020 presidential election, which he lost to Biden. While the first Trump-led withdrawal from the landmark U.N. agreement — adopted ...
We asked researchers how they stay positive even after the world tipped past 1.5 degrees warming last year. Their answers might surprise.
Climate change is not just about facts. It is wrong to dismiss the disengaged on the grounds that they are out of touch with reality.
There is no place to run and hide from climate change. The government’s latest science assessment is that climate impacts “are already far-reaching and worsening across every region of the United States.” And without deep cuts in fossil fuel pollution, “severe climate risks to the United States will continue to grow.”
Continuing to chip away at the partisan barriers that separate Americans on climate change will require even more coalition building that sets an example by being ambitious, productive and visible.
Ahead of the next federal election, a sophisticated grassroots campaign is again looking to shake up the two-party system and break the major parties' decades-long stranglehold on blue-ribbon seats. This time,