Election 2016 Endgame: Vote!
Every candidate appearing on your ballot has a record of where they stand on the environment. You need to know that information. Then vote like the earth depends on you…because it does.
Every candidate appearing on your ballot has a record of where they stand on the environment. You need to know that information. Then vote like the earth depends on you…because it does.
The media failed. In all the debates, not once was the environment or climate change addressed.
At the RNC convention, Ms. Trump came across as deeply concerned about the issues facing working women.
36,717,656 unmarried women voted in the 2012 Presidential election. That comprised 28.9 percent of all votes.
It’s easy to look at history, whether recent or in previous centuries, to question a lack of action on the part of individuals and nations. It’s more difficult to want to see things in the present.
John Kasich stated, “We don’t want to destroy people’s jobs, based on some theory that is not proven.”
The Baltimore Sun has a long history of editorials calling into question O’Malley’s lack of political will around hard environmental challenges — particularly those that could damage his standing with donors and specific constituencies.
Direct about the fact that the party of environmentalist Teddy Roosevelt has become entrenched in refuting the findings of the larger scientific community, Brainard said, “You have to trust 97 percent of scientists.”
The report by Media Matters found that the “Media Sowed Doubt In Coverage Of UN Climate Report.”
Offering into the record a statement designed to take the conversation into a different direction, Sen. Bernie Sanders, (I-VT), insisted that the hearing was not really a referendum on Gina McCarthy, but rather—“a debate about global warming.”