Current:Home > InvestDemand for Presidential Climate Debate Escalates after DNC Says No -ProfitSphere Academy
Demand for Presidential Climate Debate Escalates after DNC Says No
View
Date:2025-04-12 20:33:09
Like Miami, the low-lying coastal city where Democrats will hold their first presidential debates of the 2020 race, the Democratic National Committee is at risk of being inundated.
Fifteen of its presidential candidates, more than 50 of its member organizations in the states, and a slew of progressive organizations that make up its voting base, some armed with petitions bearing over 200,000 signatures, all are now calling for the DNC to hold a separate climate-focused debate. The executive committee of the Democratic party in Miami-Dade County—the U.S. metropolitan area considered most vulnerable to sea level rise and where the first debates will be held June 26 and 27—voted unanimously Monday to urge Democrats to devote one of the 12 Democratic presidential debates to the climate crisis.
DNC Chairman Tom Perez, who rejected a climate-focused debate last week, tried to explain the party’s opposition in a post on Medium on Tuesday, saying it would be impractical to hold a single issue forum “at the request of one candidate.”
The statement, which gamely ignored that the dispute had grown far bigger than Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, the low-polling climate-focused candidate who touched off the climate debate debate, provoked a new wave of outrage from critics within the party’s crucial block of young, climate-focused voters.
“Our very survival as a species is at stake,” tweeted Evan Weber, political director of the youth-led climate activist group Sunrise Movement. “Let’s act like it.”
Sunrise, the young group that has championed the Green New Deal through its marches, social media and Capitol Hill protests, has been organizing a rally ahead of the second Democratic debate in Detroit in July. Using the hashtag #ChangetheDebate, Sunrise has been arguing for a greater focus and strong plans from candidates on climate change—and for a climate-only debate.
DNC on Defensive Against Its Own Base
In addition to the risk of alienating young voters and stoking discord on the eve of its big show in Florida—a state key to any 2020 path to victory—the DNC has backed itself into a defensive crouch on an issue that should be a winner for the party.
Although Democratic presidential candidates differ in their views on solutions, all of them accept the science of climate change. Recent polls suggest that puts Democrats more in step with the electorate than President Donald Trump, whose fossil-fueled policies and denial of the science offer a clear contrast. Of course, Trump’s views on climate change were well known before his election, but the DNC never sought to make climate a battlefront in the 2016 campaign.
The DNC was not alone in ignoring global warming as a political issue. Not one question on climate change was asked by the journalist moderators in any of the three debates between Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton, despite a drive by environmental and social activist groups to elevate the visibility of the issue in the debates.
Trump and Clinton did answer a jobs-and-energy question from one town hall audience member, a coal industry worker, giving Trump an opportunity to tout his dedication to the country’s “clean” coal stores, which he said would last 1,000 years. Trump did not have to field a single climate change question through 11 GOP primary debates. The only airing of the issue in a candidate forum was an extensive exchange between Clinton and her then-primary opponent Sen. Bernie Sanders during the primaries.
There were no climate questions asked in the presidential debates in 2012, either. The last presidential debate exchange on the issue was between President Barack Obama and the late Sen. John McCain in 2008.
Perez: We Can’t Have Debates on Every Issue
Sanders is one of the 15 current presidential candidates now calling for the DNC to schedule a climate-focused debate. With former Vice President Joe Biden joining the call, all of the top-polling Democratic candidates have voiced support for such a single-issue forum.
Perez said the party had received more than 50 requests to hold single-issue debates on subjects ranging from reform of the criminal justice system, to health care, to voting rights to LGBTQ rights.
“We knew it would be unfair and unrealistic to ask the candidates to participate in so many,” he said. Perez said the party already has made an unprecedented commitment to 12 debates. He said he did not believe the issue would be ignored in those debates as it was in the past.
“I have the utmost confidence that, based on our conversations with networks, climate change will be discussed early and often during our party’s primary debates,” Perez said.
He may be right. The first debate will be hosted by NBC News, MSNBC and Telemundo. Chuck Todd, the host of Meet the Press who will be one of the questioners, has signaled that he takes climate seriously as a political issue—he kicked off the year by devoting a full program to climate change, pointedly giving no time to science deniers on the show. Both MSNBC and Telemundo have given extensive coverage to the Green New Deal and its congressional avatar, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.
But Tina Podlodowski, chair of the Washington state Democrats, who has organized DNC state members to push for a climate debate, said climate change is such a cross-cutting issue that it deserves its own forum, where its many aspects can be addressed in depth.
“As a grassroots state party chair, I hear daily from people on the ground who say climate change is their top issue for the next President,” she wrote in a post on Medium, also posted Tuesday. Noting its impact on health care and the economy, she said, “Climate change is not a single issue.”
It remains to be seen whether the DNC will be able to bail out from the flood of opposition it is facing from within, or whether it will be forced to seek the higher ground of a compromise on an issue that is promising to animate politics in 2020 as it never has before.
veryGood! (4427)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- A New York City lawmaker accused of bringing a gun to a pro-Palestinian protest is arraigned
- Seattle-area police searching for teen accused of randomly killing a stranger resting on a bus
- New Study Warns of an Imminent Spike of Planetary Warming and Deepens Divides Among Climate Scientists
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Toyota recalls nearly 1.9 million RAV4 SUVs in the U.S. over fire risk
- Succession’s Alan Ruck Involved in 4-Vehicle Car Crash at Hollywood Pizzeria
- 'Planet Earth' returns for Part 3: Release date, trailer and how to watch in the U.S.
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Chronic drug shortages stress hospitals and patients
Ranking
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Why Catherine Lowe Worries It's Going to Be Years Before We See The Golden Bachelorette
- Khloe Kardashian Reveals She Wore Prosthetic Lips for This Look
- Bank of England keeps main UK interest rate unchanged at 15-year high of 5.25%
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- 'Yellowstone' final episodes moved to Nov. 2024; Paramount announces two spinoff series
- The Truth About Jason Sudeikis and Lake Bell's Concert Outing
- Nevada Sen. Jacky Rosen says antisemitic threats hit her when she saw them not as a senator, but as a mother
Recommendation
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
The Truth About Jason Sudeikis and Lake Bell's Concert Outing
Rep. George Santos survives effort to expel him from the House. But he still faces an ethics report
How Charlie Sheen and Two and a Half Men Co-Creator Chuck Lorre Ended Their Yearslong Feud
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Bob Knight's death brings the reckoning of a legacy. A day we knew would come.
Prince William Reveals Prince George Is a Budding Athlete
Friends Director Says Cast Was Destroyed After Matthew Perry's Death