Sunday, September 20, 2015

How Republicans Made Climate Change America's Most Divisive Political Issue

GOP-led climate denial threatens the future of the entire world.


@FoxNews host Shepard Smith says climate change is real (Credit: #tcot #EcoRight http://hub.am/1j7ORmX) Click to Enlarge.
It's been over a year since polling data found that climate change has emerged as America's most polarizing political issue.  The survey, conducted by the Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire, found that the divisiveness characterizing the climate debate is so strong it has eclipsed such longstanding hot-button issues as gun control, evolution, the death penalty and even abortion.  And with President Obama recently making an historic visit to Alaska to speak about the urgency of acting on climate change just as Republicans strive to derail his climate agenda, there is little sign that the climate gap separating the nation's two major parties will be bridged any time soon.

In 2009, the Pew Research Center surveyed Americans' views about the state of science and its impact on society.  They concluded that "the strongest correlate of opinion on climate change is partisan affiliation."  Two-thirds of Republicans (67 percent) believe that global warming isn't actually happening — or if it is, it's not from man-made causes.  By contrast, most Democrats (64 percent) say the planet is heating up mainly due to humans.

Climate change should not be this polarizing.  Last year, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the UN's climate arm, reported that scientists are more than 95 percent certain that the primary cause of global warming is human activity.

American Pipe Dream
When it comes to the general election, the climate issue poses an electoral problem for the Republicans.  A majority of Americans say they are more likely to support political candidates who promise to tackle climate change, according to a recent poll.  Conducted by the New York Times, Stanford University and Resources for the Future, the poll found that two-thirds of Americans say they would support candidates who promised to take action to combat climate change.  Almost half of Republicans (48 percent) say the same thing.  The poll also found that a solid majority of U.S. voters, 83 percent, believe global warming poses a serious threat to the world.

Read more at How Republicans Made Climate Change America's Most Divisive Political Issue

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