ESPN NFL analyst Mina Kimes took issue with the lack of time spent talking about climate change during the presidential debate on ABC News.
After a year of floods and storms across the country, more than 10 percent of Americans no longer have home insurance, as climate risk sends the insurance industry fleeing vulnerable places. Record heat waves have strained infrastructure and killed hundreds of Americans.
Here’s what the Times climate team would ask Harris and Trump about climate change, energy policy and the environment.
A: Harris calls climate change an existential threat and says the United States needs to act urgently to address it. As a presidential candidate in 2019, she released a $10 trillion climate plan that calls for investing in renewable energy,
As Election Day 2024 approaches, neither former President Donald Trump nor Vice President Kamala Harris have released their plans to address climate change or energy policy. Their campaign speeches, party platforms and track records in office provide some guidance for voters on what they might expect from a Harris or Trump administration.
Vice President Harris said the economic costs of climate change are already clear, with homeowners facing skyrocketing insurance prices.
Former President Donald Trump, who has famously called climate change a “hoax” for many years, hasn’t used the word lately with respect to climate change. But he still clings to some similar arguments,
Donald Trump offered no climate plan during his debate with Kamala Harris, claiming instead that China paid Joe Biden “millions of dollars.”
KING 5 fact checked some of the claims made by the Bob Ferguson and Dave Reichert during the debate on Sept. 10.
While she decides, it’s not like the climate will let her have a breather. After all, Harris took the reins of the Democratic Party during the hottest summer on record—a summer where New England roasted in the triple digits and Phoenix was over 100 degrees Fahrenheit for 100 days straight.
At the presidential debate Tuesday night, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump competed over who liked fracking more. The answer is obviously Trump, but that may not have been clear to the casual viewer: Asked about the climate crisis at the tail end of the night,