President upended US efforts to combat climate change and accelerate clean energy development, according to FT analysis
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.
Allies say the president's clean energy and environmental justice achievements will last. But he leaves behind no solution for the nation's fossil fuel reliance.
Trump has pledged to overturn Biden’s progress on climate change. What will that mean? - The U.S. saw some of its costliest natural disasters in the last few months during the Earth’s hottest year on
A vast left-wing influence campaign I call the Woketopus is responsible for the Joe Biden malaise. My book shows how to combat it.
Zeldin, a former Republican congressman from New York, is a longtime Trump ally and served on Trump’s defense team during his first impeachment.
More is needed to combat climate change, however, Biden said. Mayors need to help push Congress for extra disaster relief funding to “upgrade the power grids, plant millions of trees [and] build resilient communities that can withstand extreme weather,” he said. “Not only to rebuild, but to build back better than before.”
In normal circumstances, Trump’s influence would be limited because another president will replace him in four years. But
What is clear is that after four contentious years, Biden leaves Washington as a remarkably consequential one-term president.
President Donald Trump’s first week in office included a flurry of executive orders with implications for Earth’s climate and environment.
Reflecting the Trump administration’s priorities, the Environmental Protection Agency has now removed all information about climate change from its home page and other prominent areas of its website.
Questions abound over how Trump will deal with China and Russia, as well as India and emerging powers in the global South. U.S. foreign policy is headed into a period of uncertainty, even if Trump’s first term provides a stark reference point for how he might manage the United States’ role in the world in the coming years.