The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

O’Rourke on climate, Trump on ‘no collusion’

- By Calvin Woodward, Seth Borenstein and Hope Yen

WASHINGTON » Beto O’Rourke opened his Democratic presidenti­al campaign this past week with a call to action on global warming that misreprese­nted the science. From Iowa, he claimed scientists are united in believing the planet only has a dozen years to turn the tide on climate change, which is not quite their view.

In Washington, an exasperate­d federal judge fact-checked the “no collusion mantra” recited by President Donald Trump and his associates as they try to dispel suspicions that people from his 2016 campaign and Russia worked together to tilt that election. Judge Amy Berman Jackson, while sentencing former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, reminded her courtroom — and indirectly the president — that Manafort’s trial was unrelated to questions of collusion with Russia.

“Court is one of those places where facts still matter,” Jackson said. “The ‘no collusion’ mantra is simply a non sequitur.”

That didn’t stop the refrain. “Again that was proven today, no collusion,” Trump tweeted.

A look at some of the political rhetoric of the past week:

CLIMATE CHANGE

O’ROURKE, on global warming: “This is our final chance. The scientists are absolutely unanimous on this. That we have no more than 12 years to take incredibly bold action on this crisis.” — remarks in Keokuk, Iowa, on Thursday.

THE FACTS: There is no scientific consensus, much less unanimity, that the planet only has 12 years to fix the problem.

A report by the United Nations Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, drawn from the work of hundreds of scientists, uses 2030 as a prominent benchmark because signatorie­s to the Paris agreement have pledged emission cuts by then. But it’s not a last chance, hard deadline for action, as it has been interprete­d in some quarters.

“Glad to clear this up,” James Skea, co-chairman of the report and professor of sustainabl­e energy at Imperial College London, told The Associated Press. The panel “did not say we have 12 years left to save the world.”

He added: “The hotter it gets, the worse it gets, but there is no cliff edge.”

“This has been a persistent source of confusion,” agreed Kristie L. Ebi, director of the Center for Health and the Global Environmen­t at the University of Washington in Seattle. “The report never said we only have 12 years left.”

The report forecasts that global warming is likely to increase by 0.5 degrees Celsius or 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit between 2030 and 2052 “if it continues to increase at the current rate.” The climate has already warmed by 1 degree C or 1.8 degrees F since the pre-Industrial Age.

Even holding warming to that level brings harmful effects to the environmen­t, the report said, but the impact increases greatly if the increase in the global average temperatur­e approaches 2 degrees C or 3.6 degrees F.

“The earth does not reach a cliff at 2030 or 2052,” Ebi told AP. But “keep adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere and temperatur­es will continue to rise.”

As much as climate scientists see the necessity for broad and immediate action to address global warming, they do not agree on an imminent point of no return.

Cornell University climate scientist Natalie M. Mahowald told the AP that a 12-year time frame is a “robust number for trying to cut emissions” and to keep the increase in warming under current levels.

But she said sketching out unduly dire consequenc­es is not “helpful to solving the problem.”

RUSSIA INVESTIGAT­ION

TRUMP, on Manafort’s sentencing to a second federal prison term: “I can only tell you one thing: Again that was proven today, no collusion.” — remarks Wednesday to reporters at the White House.

THE FACTS: There was no such proof in that trial or in Manafort’s other trial. Whether collusion happened was not a subject of the charges against Manafort. It’s one of the central issues in a separate and continuing investigat­ion by special counsel Robert Mueller.

In the case that produced Manafort’s first prison sentence, he was convicted of tax and bank fraud related to his work advising Ukrainian politician­s. Judge T.S. Ellis III neither cleared nor implicated the president, instead emphasizin­g that Manafort was “not before this court for anything having to do with collusion with the Russian government.”

Trump ignored that point afterward, tweeting: “Both the Judge and the lawyer in the Paul Manafort case stated loudly and for the world to hear that there was NO COLLUSION with Russia.” Trump misquoted the lawyer as well as the judge.

On Wednesday, Jackson sentenced Manafort for misleading the government about his foreign lobbying work and for encouragin­g witnesses to lie on his behalf. Again, the case did not turn on his leadership of Trump’s campaign. “The investigat­ion is still ongoing,” she noted, scolding Manafort’s lawyers for bringing up the “no collusion” refrain during the trial.

The two judges sentenced Manafort to 7.5 years altogether.

As with other Americans who were close to Trump and have been charged in the Mueller probe, Manafort hasn’t been accused of involvemen­t in Russian election interferen­ce. Nor has he been cleared of that suspicion. The same is true of Trump.

THE BORDER

TRUMP: “Since 1976, presidents have declared 59 national emergencie­s . ... The only emergency Congress voted to revoke was the one to protect our own country. So, think of that: With all of the national emergencie­s, this was the one they don’t want to do. And this is the one, perhaps, they should most do.” — Oval Office remarks Friday after vetoing the congressio­nal resolution seeking to strike down his declaratio­n of a border emergency.

THE FACTS: His declaratio­n was not the only one designed to protect the country.

President Barack Obama declared an emergency in 2009 to protect the nation from the swine flu, which had killed more than 1,000 people and spread to 46 states before he took that step. The H1N1 flu strain was linked to more than 274,000 hospitaliz­ations and 12,000 deaths in the U.S. between April 2009 and April 2010.

It enabled the activation of emergency plans, such as moving emergency rooms offsite to keep those infected with the virus away from other emergency room patients, and it had Republican support. Unlike Trump’s order, it was not designed to free up money that Congress had already refused to spend.

Most national emergencie­s declared by presidents have been narrowly drawn, designed to protect U.S. interests in foreign countries, often in response to crises breaking abroad.

TRUMP on border security: “We’re apprehendi­ng record numbers of people.” — drug-traffickin­g meeting Wednesday.

THE FACTS: One major record has been broken — the number of migrant families arrested for crossing into the U.S. illegally. Other records have not.

More than 76,000 migrants crossed the U.S.-Mexico border last month, more than double the number from the same period last year. Most were families coming in increasing­ly large groups.

Overall numbers of Border Patrol arrests were the highest in 12 years, but not the highest ever.

The annual numbers are far from a record. About 400,000 people were arrested for crossing the border illegally in the last budget year, just one-quarter of the 1.6 million in 2000. That is the record.

MELANIA TRUMP

TRUMP: “The Fake News photoshopp­ed pictures of Melania, then propelled conspiracy theories that it’s actually not her by my side in Alabama and other places. They are only getting more deranged with time!” — tweet Wednesday.

THE FACTS: No, there’s no evidence that the news organizati­ons Trump likes to call the “Fake News” doctored pictures of Melania Trump to peddle the falsehood that a stand-in took the first lady’s place in Alabama last week or other places at other times. Some wrote about the fakery, spread by a mix of satirical, gullible and anti-Trump people online, and Trump’s tweet gives them more visibility than they would have had otherwise.

Among them, The Guardian columnist Marina Hyde tweeted in October 2017 that she was “absolutely convinced Melania is being played by a Melania impersonat­or these days.” She followed up with an admission that she had indulged in a “parallel fake universe” in which she fantasized that the first lady had escaped to small-town Missouri and was volunteeri­ng at a shelter for refugees.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump winks during the annual presentati­on of a bowl of shamrocks with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, Thursday in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump winks during the annual presentati­on of a bowl of shamrocks with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, Thursday in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Beto O’Rourke speaks at the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers Local 13 hall in Burlington, Iowa.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Beto O’Rourke speaks at the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers Local 13 hall in Burlington, Iowa.

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