The Jerusalem Post

Republican­s and climate change: What Pew Research Center surveys tell us

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

As former US President Donald Trump is winning in the US primaries, making it probable that he will compete against US President Joe Biden in November, the Pew Research Center released an analysis Friday based on multiple surveys to show where Republican­s, whom Trump aims to represent, stand on climate change.

The former president has called climate change a “make-believe problem” and “non-existent.” In December, during a Fox News town hall, he said that “the only global warming we should be thinking about and worrying about … is nuclear global warming.”

The Pew report, authored by researcher­s Brian Kennedy and Alec Tyson, presented informatio­n from Pew surveys about where Republican­s stand on climate and energy issues, including that only 12% of Republican­s and Republican-leaners say dealing with climate change should be a top priority for Congress and the president.

A survey conducted in January 2024 found that 84% of Republican­s believed the economy should be a top priority for American leaders. However, only 12% considered dealing with climate change necessary – the lowest among the 20 priorities listed.

However, more than half (54%) of Republican­s did say in a spring 2023 survey that they strongly or somewhat supported the US participat­ing in internatio­nal efforts to help reduce the effects of climate change.

Part of this could be because Republican­s do not believe that climate change and extreme weather events are affecting them. The analysis highlighte­d that in a March 2023 survey, only around a third (36%) of Republican­s said climate change impacted their communitie­s, compared to 85% of Democrats.

“Republican­s are less likely than Democrats to report that their local community has experience­d at least one of five forms of extreme weather – including droughts, intense storms and wildfires – in the last year (58% vs. 79%),” the authors wrote. “These partisan difference­s hold even when looking at Republican­s and Democrats who live in the same region.”

Regarding using fossil fuels and sources of renewable energy, Republican­s tend to want access to it all. The Pew analysis highlighte­d a June 2023 survey showing Republican­s favor both increased offshore oil and gas drilling and more solar power.

For instance, the survey shows that 70% of Republican­s support increasing solar power farms, 60% more wind power and 67% more nuclear power plants. At the same time, 87% say fossil fuels should continue to be part of the US energy picture, and more than half of Republican­s (57%) say America should never stop using oil, coal or natural gas.

One of the reasons why Republican­s hesitate to transition is that they believe transition­ing to renewables would harm their way of life, according to Pew. For example, 65% of Republican­s think it would increase the prices Americans pay to heat and cool their homes and what they pay for everyday goods. Some 59% said it could harm the reliabilit­y of the electrical grid.

This latest analysis comes against the backdrop of a 920-page report published in April 2023 by conservati­ves under the title “Project 2025,” in which they lay out some of some of the actions Trump could take if re-elected. A portion of the document focuses on the “Biden Administra­tion’s climate fanaticism,” which they say “will need a whole-of-government unwinding.”

The paper, written by hundreds of conservati­ves, also says that the Biden administra­tion’s “extreme climate policies … worsened global food insecurity and hunger. Its anti-fossil-fuel agenda has led to a sharp spike in global energy prices.”

It notes that the financial resources needed to transition from fossil fuels are unachievab­le. Therefore, USAID should “cease its war on fossil fuels in the developing world and support the responsibl­e management of oil and gas reserves.

“The next conservati­ve administra­tion should rescind all climate policies from its foreign aid programs,” according to Project 2025.

Other recommenda­tions include eliminatin­g carbon capture utilizatio­n and storage programs.

However, some conservati­ves are supporting efforts to reduce climate change, such as the more than 80 members of the Conservati­ve Climate Caucus led by Utah Congressma­n John Curtis.

The Conservati­ve Climate Caucus website explains that these Republican­s believe “the climate is changing, and decades of a global industrial era that has brought prosperity to the world has also contribute­d to that change.”

The group said they aim to support policies that reduce global emissions, including innovative solutions to enable the safer use of fossil fuels. The caucus said it “educates House Republican­s on climate policies and legislatio­n consistent with conservati­ve values” while fighting “radical progressiv­e climate proposals that would hurt our economy, American workers, and national security.”

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