Clinton is bringing in Al Gore as
her closer on climate change as she struggles to appeal to young voters who
consider the issue a priority.
Vice president during her husband's eight years in the White
House and a longtime environmental activist, Gore will join the Democratic
presidential candidate at a rally in Miami Tuesday. During the event, Clinton
will emphasizing her plans to develop more clean energy, reduce fossil fuel
production and build more weather-resistant infrastructure. She will also
continue her attacks on Republican Donald Trump.
Speaking at Ohio State University Monday night, Clinton said:
"I'm running against somebody who doesn't believe in climate change or at
least he says he doesn't, who has even said he thinks it's a hoax created by
the Chinese."
During the primary contest against progressive Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Clinton offered clean
energy plans and came out against the Keystone XL Pipeline,
which is opposed by environmentalists.
"Climate
change is one of the issues where the difference between Hillary Clinton and
Donald Trump is night and day," said Clinton spokesman Brian Fallon.
"For many of the core supporters we are seeking to galvanize in the
remaining weeks of the campaign, including young voters, communicating the
boldness of her plan is important."
Trump has repeatedly questioned climate change and said he plans
to "renegotiate" the Paris Climate Agreement, an international treaty
designed to curb the rise in global temperatures.
The world is on pace for the hottest year on record, breaking
marks set in 2015, 2014, and 2010. It is about 1.8 degrees warmer than a
century ago. Scientists have also connected man-made climate change to deadly
heat waves, droughts and flood-inducing downpours.
Gore explored global warming in his 2006 documentary, "An
Inconvenient Truth."
Advocacy group NextGen Climate, founded by billionaire environmentalist
Tom Steyer, is backing Clinton and has put $25 million into a millennial
outreach program. Their surveys of young people showed that early in the
summer, many did not see a difference between Clinton and Trump on climate, but
as they learned more, they moved toward Clinton.
"We've seen throughout this campaign that climate change is
an issue that millennials care about deeply," said NextGen's political
director Heather Hargreaves.
Despite
Clinton's promotion of energy policies aimed at lessening climate change, there
has not always been unanimity among her campaign aides about how strong that
support should be. A message released Tuesday by Wikileaks from Clinton
campaign chairman John Podesta's hacked email account shows some aides
were not totally on board with Clinton's promise in June 2015 to raise fees on
companies involved in oil exploration and fossil fuel production on federal
land.
Clinton had broached the idea in her campaign launch speech in
June 2015, but raising energy royalties could be politically explosive in
western states where oil and gas firms have spent billions of dollars on
extracting fuels.
In July 2015, campaign speechwriting director Dan Schwerin told
Podesta in an email that "I think we're going to have to make peace with
our fossil fuels royalties, since she's already promised that."
On July 15, 2015, Clinton said she wanted to raise fees and
phase out fuel extraction operating on public lands, but warned it could not be
done quickly because "we still have to run our economy, we still have to
turn on the lights."
Source : ChicacoTribune .
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