7 Green Groups That Didn't Back Biden Just Endorsed Harris as 'Our Only Choice'

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Harris should have little problem to win the votes of climate change sheeple and activists.
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Jul 31, 2024

Progressive climate and environmental advocacy groups on Wednesday stressed the threat posed by the Republican presidential ticket and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, the presumptive Democratic nominee for the November election.

One coalition of six groups—350 Action, Center for Biological Diversity Action Fund, Clean Water Action, Climate Hawks Vote, Food and Water Action, and Friends of the Earth Action—cited Harris' record as vice president and a U.S. senator from California.

Despite his months as the presumptive Democratic nominee, none of the organizations had endorsed President Joe Biden before he dropped out of the race and backed Harris earlier this month.

"Vice President Harris is a visible leader in the Biden-Harris administration's successful work to address environmental injustice, tackle the climate crisis, hold polluters accountable, reduce water pollution, and ensure clean drinking water for all," said Clean Water Action president and CEO Jeff Carter, emphasizing that her actions "have made a real difference in people's lives."

Jeff Ordower of 350 Action highlighted that in addition to being "part of the administration that invested in renewable energy through the historic Inflation Reduction Act," Harris "has a history of taking on Big Oil and advocating for environmental justice."

"As a global climate movement, we know Harris represents not just the ability to make progress in the U.S., but globally as well," he added. "For those... who care about democracy, climate, and decreased corporate capture of our government, Kamala Harris is our only choice."

"For those... who care about democracy, climate, and decreased corporate capture of our government, Kamala Harris is our only choice."


Kierán Suckling, president of the Center for Biological Diversity Action Fund, similarly urged "everyone who cares about our planet, environmental justice, women's rights, civil rights, and our democracy to get out and vote for Kamala Harris to be our next president."

Suckling also took aim at former President Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, declaring that "Harris will lead us toward a brighter future for our children and grandchildren, and put the nightmare of Trump behind us."

Trump—who earlier this month announced Big Oil-backed Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) as his running mate—has vowed to "drill, baby, drill" and roll back the Biden-Harris administration climate policies if fossil fuel executives pour money into his campaign.

Although the U.S. is among five wealthy countries that have led a global surge in oil and gas development this year, Harris' campaign has warned that "oil barons are salivating" over Trump's potential return to the White House.

A March study found that Trump's plans for a second term would lead to 4 billion more tons of carbon dioxide being released into the atmosphere by 2030 when compared with the policies of Biden—who has passed the torch to Harris, whose online nomination process is set to start on Thursday.



"Kamala Harris' record provides a stark contrast with Donald Trump and the far-right, pro-polluter Project 2025," said Wenonah Hauter, founder and executive director of Food and Water Action. "Of course, much more needs to be done, and Harris' positions do not yet go far enough to tackle the existential threats to our food, water, and climate."

"But with a President Harris, we will have a chance to build the political power to move the bold climate initiatives we need," Hauter emphasized. "Four more years of Trump and Project 2025 will further accelerate an already escalating climate crisis and eviscerate important protections for our food and water."

The six groups that backed Harris but not Biden were among the campaigners and scientists angered by the president supporting the Willow project and Mountain Valley Pipeline, continuing fossil fuel lease sales, skipping last year's United Nations summit, and declining to declare a national climate emergency.

As HEATED, which scooped the endorsement news, reported late Tuesday:

Harris has already received endorsements from the so-called "Big Green" groups—the political arms of the League of Conservation Voters, the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Sierra Club, and Clean Energy for America. But those weren't much of a surprise, as each group had already backed Biden's reelection bid, and are traditionally loyal to Democratic Party politicians.

The groups endorsing Harris on Wednesday, however, had so far held off on throwing their support behind Biden while he was running for reelection—in part because of the sitting president's mixed record on climate policy.

"It was very much a debate" on whether to endorse Biden, said one of the group's staffers, who spoke on background because the Harris announcement is not yet public. But with Harris, the calculus has changed.

"Because of her work in California and when she was a senator—a lot of us worked with her on creating the Environmental Justice for All Act—it gives us hope," the staffer said. "She's just a different person [than Biden], and has a stronger track record."

"Friends of the Earth Action is excited to endorse Kamala Harris for president of the United States," the group's president, Erich Pica said Wednesday. "We are not going back to an era dominated by fossil fuel interests, corporate greed, and disenfranchisement. Instead, we're looking forward to building a healthy and just future with Vice President Harris."

For Climate Hawks Vote, this is the organization's first presidential endorsement since its founding over a decade ago.

"We're breaking our usual rule of not endorsing in presidential elections, given our strong history with Kamala Harris (we endorsed her in her 2016 Senate race), her track record in taking on Big Oil and holding polluters accountable, and the extraordinary moment of this election," explained RL Miller, the group's president. "We are climate hawks who vote, and we'll be flocking together for Kamala Harris."

The Green New Deal Network—which also never endorsed Biden—separately threw its support behind Harris on Wednesday.

"What the Green New Deal really is, is understanding that everything's connected," the network's national director, Kaniela Ing, toldInside Climate News. "Making sure our tax dollars aren't just going to kill children abroad, but to build schools and hospitals here at home… Local control of resources, self-determination of our communities. That's the vision Kamala Harris, given her background—being bused to schools, really being a product of a lot of our social programs—really understands."

One group that has not yet endorsed Harris but has certainly been attentive to both major party tickets is the youth-led Sunrise Movement. The organization warned earlier this month that the Republicans would cause "catastrophic and irreversible damage" to the climate if elected, and some members were arrested for a Monday protest Vance's Senate office on Capitol Hill.

That same day, Sunrise rallied outside of the Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C. to urge Harris "to put forward a comprehensive plan on the economy and climate."

Sunrise is also part of a youth-led coalition—which includes Gen-Z for Change, March for Our Lives, and United We Dream Action—that wrote to Harris last week, "This is your chance to energize young people and our communities to vote, mount one of the greatest political comebacks in decades, and deliver a resounding defeat to the far-right agenda of Trump and Vance."

 

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Young climate advocates think Harris can do more for the environment than Biden, despite his big wins
Aug. 2, 2024


The Summary
  • Many young climate advocates see Kamala Harris as stronger on environmental issues than Joe Biden.​
  • The Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act was the largest investment in climate action in U.S. history, but young environmentalists want to see more.​
  • They pointed to Harris' record of prosecuting oil companies and her co-sponsorship of the Green New Deal as reasons they favor her.​

President Joe Biden may have passed the United States’ most significant climate legislation ever, but many young environmental activists say they see Kamala Harris as stronger on the issue.

Representatives from 11 organizations devoted to elevating young voters’ concerns about climate change said Harris’ record of going after big oil companies as a prosecutor and her co-sponsorship of the Green New Deal as a senator make her a more appealing candidate than Biden, despite his environmental wins.

“She has a history around holding Big Oil accountable in a way that we haven’t been able to do in the last four years,” said Aru Shiney-Ajay, 26, the executive director of the Sunrise Movement, which pushes for government interventions to address climate change.

The Green New Deal Network, a coalition of 19 progressive environmental and social justice organizations including the Sunrise Movement, endorsed Harris this week but had not previously issued an endorsement for Biden.

The Biden administration’s record on climate issues has been relatively strong: The Inflation Reduction Act, the largest investment in climate action in U.S. history, allocated nearly $370 billion to environmental efforts. And the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act included investments in clean energy, electric vehicle infrastructure, public transit and climate resilience work.

But several young climate activists ages 16 to 29 said for them, the expansion of the fossil fuel industry during Biden’s presidency has clouded those successes.

Oil companies have seen higher profits and U.S. oil exports have been higher under Biden than under President Donald Trump, Reuters reported. Biden also approved the Willow oil-drilling project in Alaska and fast-tracked construction of the Mountain Valley Pipeline in Virginia and West Virginia.

“It’s frankly been frustrating to see that this current administration, despite claiming leadership on climate, has approved so many fossil fuel projects,” said Keanu Arpels-Josiah, 19, an organizer with Fridays for Future, the international youth-led climate group started by Greta Thunberg.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

Dana Fisher, director of the Center for Environment, Community and Equity at American University, said it’s not that young voters are ignoring Biden’s work on climate — they just want to see more.

“The young people know it’s not enough because they recognize how severe the climate crisis is,” Fisher said.

She added that a couple youth climate leaders told her in the spring they were discouraging their members from voting in the presidential election at all.

“I was like, ‘Are you kidding me? Don’t you remember what happened in 2000?’” Fisher said, referring to the razor-thin margin that decided that year’s presidential election. “Which, of course they didn’t, because if they were alive, they were like in diapers. It’s very hard to have a long view when you’re younger.”

Since Biden dropped out of the race, Fisher said, the young climate activists she has talked to seem more likely to vote.

Harris’ young supporters have highlighted the settlements she secured as California attorney general with Chevron, BP and ConocoPhillips over their handling of hazardous materials.

“Biden is a lot more moderate in terms of his policy approach, whereas Kamala isn’t afraid to tackle environmental and climate policy in a way that really gets at the root, especially with polluters,” said Iris Zhan, 20, a youth advisory board member at the Global Youth Storytelling and Research Lab, which engages youth leaders in climate and environmental justice research.

Harris has brought up that early-career work in some of her initial campaign appearances.

“As district attorney, to go after polluters, I created one of the first environmental justice units in our nation,” she said on July 22 in Wilmington, Delaware, referring to her time as district attorney of San Francisco. “Donald Trump stood in Mar-a-Lago and told Big Oil lobbyists he would do their bidding for a $1 billion campaign contribution.”

Harris’ California background also seems to resonate with some young environmentalists.

Zanagee Artis, 24, a cofounder of a climate justice organization called Zero Hour, said because California regularly experiences the effects of the climate crisis — drought, heat waves, wildfires — that could “be a huge value for empathizing with young people who are fighting so hard for climate justice.”

Young activists have pointed to Harris’ climate platform during her 2020 presidential campaign, as well: At the time, she pledged to invest $10 trillion into climate action over 10 years and set a goal to transition to a 100% clean energy economy by 2045.

“I want her to be able to set that bar and not just fall into what the Biden administration was doing,” said Natalie Bookout, who will turn 18 in October and leads the Charlotte, North Carolina, chapter of the Sunrise Movement.

Heather Hargreaves, the deputy executive director of campaigns at Climate Power, a communications organization focused on electing climate leaders, said it’s possible that among young people, “there’s just been a knowledge gap on what President Biden has done in the last three years.”

A spokesperson for Harris’ campaign said she plans to build on the climate legislation in the Inflation Reduction Act but did not answer questions about her appeal over Biden with young environmentalists.

The spokesperson also clarified that although Harris said in 2019 she would ban fracking if elected president, she no longer supports such a ban.

“She doesn’t want to turn off people who are in fossil-fuel extractive states,” Fisher said. “She’s not going to end up with as progressive a platform as she had when she was in California. However, is she going to be more progressive than Biden? I expect she will be.”

Harris has secured endorsements from dozens of environmental groups and more than 350 leaders in the environmental movement.

Stephen Perkins, 29, the chief operating officer of the American Conservation Coalition, which mobilizes conservatives around environmental issues, said even members of his group "appreciate hearing from younger elected officials" like Harris.

"They realize that those elected officials sort of have more skin in the game in the climate conversation,” he said.

Among adults ages 18 to 29, 59% of those surveyed in a recent Pew Research poll said dealing with global climate change should be a top foreign policy priority — a higher share than among any other age group surveyed.

Harris has only been a presidential candidate for less than two weeks, however, so she has yet to get into the full details of her climate platform.

“We’ve got a lot of time,” Fisher said.

 
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