Rolling Stone

Jay Inslee’s Climate Crusade

The governor of Washington is running for president with a single mission: Save the planet. Is America ready for a real climate-change agenda?

- BY ANDY KROLL

The governor of Washington is running for president with a single mission: Save the planet. Is America ready for a real climate-change agenda?

On a recent Sunday morning, Jay Inslee, the Democratic governor of Washington state, paid a visit to the headquarte­rs of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in Washington, D.C. He was part of a group of governors who had come to meet with EPA chief Andrew Wheeler, the face and leader of President Trump’s all-out assault on Barack Obama’s environmen­tal legacy.

In a blue plastic folder tucked under Inslee’s arm was a summary of the latest National Climate Assessment, the fourth in a series of reports by the government’s best scientists that distilled what we know about the causes and outcomes of climate change. When he got a chance to speak, Inslee confronted Wheeler about some of the report’s most dire prediction­s — a trillion dollars’ worth of coastal property and infrastruc­ture threatened by rising seas and storms, extreme heat leading to $160 billion in lost wages, as many as tens of thousands of new deaths each year due to air pollution.

“These are very dire consequenc­es,” Inslee says he told Wheeler, “but as far as I can tell, this amount of damage is not enough to motivate you to do anything about it. How many dead people will it take before you decide to do something about climate change?”

Wheeler responded by blaming Democrats, Inslee says, and the conversati­on went downhill from there. (An EPA spokesman confirmed the exchange.) But Washington, D.C.’s, intransige­nce on the existentia­l issue of our time

is something Inslee is long accustomed to. Before he was elected governor in 2012, he served 15 years in the House of Representa­tives and earned a reputation as one of the fiercest climate warriors on Capitol Hill. He was for the Green New Deal before the Green New Deal existed, introducin­g a sweeping bill in 2005 to cap greenhouse-gas emissions, wean America off fossil fuels and scale up funding for clean-energy technologi­es. He was one of the earliest and loudest voices condemning the denialism of the Republican Party. But shaming only gets you so far. “Having expended considerab­le energy trying to persuade them and cajole them and inspire them, that has fallen on deaf ears, like talking to a rock,” he tells me recently over drinks in downtown D.C. “The only solution is to remove them.”

So Jay Inslee is running for president. His vision, he tells ROLLInG StOne, is an administra­tion organized around the climate crisis, an entire federal government working in unison to decarboniz­e the economy and help save the planet. No candidate has his record on the issue, and none of them have said nearly enough about it, he says. “A lot of these candidates want to check the box,” he tells me. But one sentence in their campaign-launch events doesn’t solve this problem. “This has to be the number-one priority of the United States,” he insists. “Every agency has to be on board, and it has to take priority over everything else we do.

You have to build a mandate for this during the campaign, and you have to express a willingnes­s to spend your political capital to get this done. I think too many other candidates are going to say, ‘I’m for the Green New Deal, and now I’m done.’ That just doesn’t cut it.”

For someone who’s spent his career working on the climate, Inslee, 68, is the most unlikely of things: an optimist. Climate change is the most complex problem humans have ever faced, but it’s also an opportunit­y to reinvent the economy and create millions of jobs while ensuring a livable planet for future generation­s. “This is a time of great peril,” he says. “But it’s also a time of great promise.”

On paper, Inslee’s résumé is a progressiv­e voter’s dream. As a congressma­n, he voted against the Iraq War, the repeal of GlassSteag­all and the bank bailout after the 2008 financial crash. As governor, he’s signed into law the first state net-neutrality bill, declared a moratorium on the death penalty, proposed a public option for health care and unveiled a plan to pardon thousands of low-level drug offenders. But he enters the race with a modest war chest, little name recognitio­n (one recent survey found that 24 percent of his own state’s voters either didn’t know enough about him or didn’t have an opinion) and a paltry online presence (his Twitter account has 33,000 followers; Sen. Kamala Harris has 2.4 million) — at a time when many Democratic voters are looking askance at white male leadership.

But Inslee’s optimism extends to the belief that his climate message will resonate with voters of all ages, races and ethnicitie­s. “It’s not an issue, it’s the issue,” former Secretary of State John Kerry says, “and he’s been as good at communicat­ing it as he’s been at governing on it.” Inslee likes to cite a nationwide poll by a left-leaning think tank that found overwhelmi­ng Democratic support for the Green New Deal. And a 2018 survey of likely Iowa caucus-goers found that 90 percent were interested in a candidate who was a leader on climate change. On the numbers alone, he’s right: The public’s understand­ing of the issue has never been greater. Americans know the science, and they want action. But are they ready for a climate president?

In Late January, I boarded a ferry in downtown Seattle that whisked me across Puget Sound to Bainbridge Island, a pastoral, well-to-do community of 25,000. The Inslees have lived on Bainbridge for two decades in a red-brick house near the water. An electric Chevy Bolt sits in the driveway, and a painted sign that says “Clam Happy” welcomes guests. Inslee meets me on the back porch and launches into a history of the region, beginning

with the native Suquamish tribe and the arrival of the Spanish in the 1500s. The Seattle skyline cuts an impressive figure across the Sound and, beyond that, the white peak of Mount Rainier rises above the landscape.

Inslee takes me inside to meet Trudi, his wife of 46 years. Sketches of Teddy Roosevelt and Albert Einstein hang on the wall. I notice a copy of Philip Roth’s The Plot Against America, an alternate history in which Nazi sympathize­r Charles Lindbergh is elected president, on an end table. He had started Roth’s book after reading It Can’t Happen Here, the 1935 Sinclair Lewis novel about the rise of authoritar­ianism in America, which had appeared on bestseller lists after Trump’s election.

Light reading aside, Inslee is not the brooding type. He’s got a lively, twitchy presence, a toe always tapping or a knee bouncing, and comes off refreshing­ly unguarded for a career politician. He introduces himself as “Jay,” never once in our interviews asked to go off-the-record and didn’t insulate himself with the typical entourage of aides. A lifelong basketball junkie — he played in the semiregula­r pickup game hosted by Obama, who half-jokingly called him “kind of a hack” on the court — Inslee has a soft spot for sports metaphors and one-line zingers of a dad-joke caliber.

We take our coffees to the living room, where a recent pastel drawing of the Olympic Mountains he’d made hangs over the fireplace. Inslee grew up across the Sound in the Seattle area, between the Olympics to the west and the Cascades to the east. His parents, a high-school teacher and a Sears Roebuck clerk, volunteere­d as trail guides, often taking Jay, one of three sons, with them on their hikes. After law school, he and Trudi moved to an alfalfa farm in Selah, outside Yakima in central Washington, where he worked on contract for the city prosecutin­g small-time criminals. In 1988, after getting involved in a local school-funding fight, he ran for the state Legislatur­e and became the first Democrat to represent the district in 16 years.

That same year, NASA scientist James Hansen delivered his now-famous testimony before the U.S. Senate about rising greenhouse gases warming the planet. Inslee began regularly attending a small monthly meeting where scientists, activists and politician­s discussed the increasing­ly dire body of climate research findings. “His mind was blown by the implicatio­ns of it,” says K.C. Golden, a Seattle-based climate activist and friend of Inslee’s who went to the meetings. The sheer magnitude of the problem, and the imbalance between powerful industries poisoning the air and water of disadvanta­ged communitie­s, spoke to Inslee on some deeper level. “He gets really angry about situations where those without privilege are run over by those” who have it, says Brian Bonlender, Inslee’s former chief of staff. “It’s part of who he is and how he thinks.” In 1992, Inslee ran for an open seat in Washington’s 4th Congressio­nal District and won on a platform that included reducing carbon emissions — an unheard-of move at the time.

His first stint in Congress lasted just one term. He cast a critical yes vote in 1994 to pass the assault-weapons ban — a vote he says cost him his seat. In his Republican-leaning district, the debate over the ban had reached the point where protesters picketed his office and flooded his staffers with angry calls about how the ban would lead to a national gun registry or a new-world order run by the United Nations. “It was the right vote then, it’s the right vote now,” he says today. “I knew it was going to be lights-out, but I vote on conviction, so I did.”

Inslee first ran for governor in 1996 but finished fifth in the blanket primary. Two years later, after he and Trudi and their three boys had moved to Bainbridge Island, he decided to challenge Rep. Rick White, a Republican, for a House seat that had elected only one other Democrat in the previous 46 years. Inslee ended up beating White handily.

After his return to Congress, Inslee became a leader on climate change, and he was more than willing to goad his Democratic and Republican colleagues into action. Invited to testify at a 2003 Senate hearing about the climate, he began his remarks by observing that Congress’ upper chamber had “been caught in the act of leadership,” earning a laugh from the committee’s chair

man, Sen. John McCain. But Inslee could be scathing in his assessment of his fellow lawmakers who refused to act. “At times, he was incredibly impatient of people who didn’t understand him,” says Chris Shays, a former Republican congressma­n from Connecticu­t who worked with Inslee on climate legislatio­n. “He was aghast that he even had to make the argument that global warming was real and a threat.”

Up until then, the discussion was largely a scientific one: partsper-million and hockey-stick graphs. On his flights to and from Seattle and in the evenings in his shared apartment across the street from the Supreme Court, he began conceptual­izing a new way of talking about the climate fight. With the science settled, defeating climate change was a matter of character, of will, and the only way out of the crisis was a massive, societywid­e mobilizati­on on par with the Apollo program that took us to the moon. “We don’t need an incrementa­l increase,” Inslee and co-author Bracken Hendricks wrote in their 2008 book, Apollo’s Fire: Igniting America’s Clean Energy Economy. “We need the equivalent of a new space program.”

Inslee introduced multiple versions of the New Apollo Energy Act, a bill to accelerate the pace of developmen­t of renewable energies, phase out tax breaks for oil and gas companies and set ambitious targets for reducing the country’s greenhouse-gas emissions. Van Jones, the CNN host who served as President Obama’s green-jobs czar, said that a common refrain in White House meetings about the clean-energy economy was, “What would a Jay Inslee think about this?” But Inslee’s bill never got a vote, and the 2009 cap-and-trade bill he worked so hard to pass died in the Senate.

Fed up with Washington, D.C., Inslee decided in 2011 to run for governor of the other Washington. He resigned from his congressio­nal seat mid-term so that he could focus on campaignin­g on a “clean-energy revolution” in his home state. He came from behind to beat a popular Republican by a three-point margin and has tried to fulfill his pledge, with mixed success. The state already had one of the cleanest electric grids and energy portfolios in the nation, but until late 2017, Republican­s controlled one chamber of the state Legislatur­e and blocked much of his climate agenda.

Still, he has approved new incentives to buy electric cars and set aside $125 million for investment­s in clean tech. He ordered his state’s ecology department to draft aggressive new limits on greenhouse-gas emissions, which were adopted in 2016. (The rule is currently being challenged in court.) A ballot measure to apply a statewide carbon tax lost last year after the oil and gas industry spent more than $31 million to defeat it. “The best compliment you can give someone is that they have the guts to get caught trying,” says former Secretary Kerry. “Jay did a lot of things that are important, like the clean-energy fund, but he also fought the big fight. You’re not serious on this issue if you aren’t in the arena to price carbon, period. Anything else is half-assing it. Not Jay.”

But the 2018 elections saw Inslee and the Democrats win big majorities in the Legislatur­e. They’re now considerin­g a package of climate-related bills that would slash emissions almost as much as the carbon tax. “Legislator­s used to be pretty scared of talking about climate,” says state Rep. Joe Fitzgibbon, a Democrat and Inslee ally. But Inslee’s focus on the climate and his electoral victories have “made legislator­s realize, ‘This is something I can flex a little bit on.’ I’m seeing that more this year than ever before.”

InSLee doesn’t shy away from confrontat­ion, and the years spent listening to Republican­s deny the existence of the planet’s most pressing issue have disabused him of the benefits of bipartisan decorum. A year ago, he shared a few thoughts with President Trump during a televised meeting with dozens of governors at the White House. He told Trump that any plan to arm teachers to defend against active shooters was dangerous and ill-conceived, that the teachers he knew didn’t want to be “packing heat” in first-grade classes, and then he offered Trump a bit of advice: “We need a little less tweeting, a little more listening.”

When I ask him about the exchange, Inslee describes Trump as a “petulant third-grader” with “his little arms folded and his lit

tle orange cheeks bulged.” He does not regret calling out the president, even as he doubts if he will ever be allowed near a microphone at the Trump White House again. “I like confrontin­g insecure bullies,” he says.

Almost from the day Trump took office, Inslee has cast himself as an antidote to Trumpism, a foil to the 45th president. Washington was the first state to sue to stop the administra­tion’s Muslim travel ban. On the day Trump announced his intention to pull the U.S. out of the Paris Agreement in June 2017, Inslee, Gov. Jerry Brown of California and Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York unveiled the U.S. Climate Alliance, a coalition of cities and states leading the resistance to Trump’s denial and reassuring the rest of the world that the U.S. was still in the fight. “We wanted to make sure that the world was not slowed down by Donald Trump’s willful ignorance,” Inslee says. “We wanted to make sure the world knew that there was progress being made here, that there was intelligen­t life in the United States, and that we were not gonna abandon the rest of the world.” Today, 22 states representi­ng half of the U.S. population and 55 percent of the country’s GDP have joined.

It was in 2018 that Inslee began to think about whether the next step in his crusade was a run for the presidency. As the chairman of the Democratic Governors Associatio­n, he spent the year stumping for candidates like Stacey Abrams in Georgia and Gretchen Whitmer in Michigan. He told me that his travels around the country not only connected him with grassroots activists working on climate change, but also gave him the confidence that he could campaign in states other than Washington. “When I was in Iowa, I was at an old seed mill, and I met some local Democrats,” he says. “I just felt at home, like I was back in Selah, where I spent 20 years in a red, Republican, agricultur­al town of 3,000.”

When we met for drinks in D.C. back in February, I asked Inslee for his theory about how to beat Trump. His response echoed the way he talks about the climate. “We are fundamenta­lly different,” he says. “I believe in a growthorie­nted, expansioni­st, innovative, creative, confident America. He has a fearful, pessimisti­c view that we’re not smart enough to defeat climate change; therefore, we have to ignore science. His are the politics of fear and division, and my politics are ones of hope and inclusion.”

Inslee is betting that his vision can win, and that a U.S. government united around the cause of climate change and a speedy transition to a new economy fueled by solar and wind power and producing low-emission vehicles will galvanize voters young and old, black, brown and white. “If you care about the economy, this is for you, because it’s the best jobcreatio­n opportunit­y we have,” he says. “If you care about health care, this is for you, because it’s one of the biggest health threats that we face. It’s national security, obviously. It’s how we use trade policies.”

That transition from a fossilfuel-powered economy to a clean one must be a “just transition,” he adds, so communitie­s of color disproport­ionately harmed by polluted air or lead-poisoned water get targeted relief and access to clean-energy jobs. He praises the Green New Deal framework introduced by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Ed Markey for fueling public interest and raising the level of ambition for possible solutions to the crisis. Inslee plans to release his own platform in the coming months. “I will have a comprehens­ive policy document that will bore you to tears with many pages of exquisitel­y comprehens­ive policies,” he says, “many of which will mirror what we’re doing in the state of Washington. That will probably be in a lot more detail than what you’ve seen out of the paper that’s floating around with the Green New Deal.”

I once asked him how he stayed optimistic given that he’s spent his life working on one of the most difficult, depressing issues there is. Almost every single thing that’s worth doing, he replied, is hard and takes longer than you’d like. Fighting climate change meets those conditions, he said, but so did suffrage, civil rights, Social Security and Medicare. “We’re not the first generation to have a hard slog. We’re just one of many,” he says. “And any advance has a common timeline, which is, you lose, you lose, you lose, you lose and then you lose. And then you win. And after you win, it sticks.”

 ??  ?? GREEN AMBITIONS
“I think a lot of other candidates are just going to say, ‘I’m for the Green New Deal’ and be done,” says Inslee. “That just doesn’t cut it.”
GREEN AMBITIONS “I think a lot of other candidates are just going to say, ‘I’m for the Green New Deal’ and be done,” says Inslee. “That just doesn’t cut it.”
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 ??  ?? THE REAL DEAL Top: Inslee testifying at a Senate climate hearing in 2003. Above: Inslee with then-California Gov. Jerry Brown at an event for the U.S. Climate Alliance, which they cofounded after Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement.
THE REAL DEAL Top: Inslee testifying at a Senate climate hearing in 2003. Above: Inslee with then-California Gov. Jerry Brown at an event for the U.S. Climate Alliance, which they cofounded after Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement.

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