The Guardian (USA)

The British right’s hostility to climate action is deeply entrenched – and extremely dangerous

- John Harris

On 8 November 1989, Margaret Thatcher gave a 4,000-word address to the United Nations general assembly in New York. It was an eloquent, urgent speech, book-ended with references to Charles Darwin and John Milton’s Paradise Lost, and full of portents of looming climate disaster that we now know all too well: the melting of polar ice, the shrinking of the Amazon rainforest, and the prospect of more frequent hurricanes, floods and water shortages.

In response, “squabbling over who is responsibl­e or who should pay” was a self-evident path to catastroph­e: what was needed, she told her audience, was “a vast internatio­nal, co-operative effort”, with no refusers or deniers. “Every country will be affected,” she said, “and no one can opt out.”

Nearly 35 years on, there is a grim hilarity about the attitudes to the climate crisis that Thatcher’s heirs have ended up embracing. Rishi Sunak first declined to go to the Cop27 summit, and then turned up to contribute almost nothing of any substance. In his party’s most recent leadership contest, Kemi Badenoch and Suella Braverman expressed particular­ly sceptical views about their government’s ostensible net zero target, and Sunak and Liz Truss fell over themselves to aim the same hostility at solar farms. Badenoch and

Braverman now have senior roles in the cabinet, while the climate change minister Graham Stuart no longer attends its meetings, and the Cop26 president Alok Sharma has been similarly demoted: for the first time in years, there is no top-tier minister focused on the climate crisis.

Even if outright climate denial is now taboo, mainstream Tory politics is brazenly focused on delay and dilution. Thanks to moves first made under Boris Johnson’s leadership, new licences will soon be issued to oil and gas prospector­s with their eyes on the North Sea, while the de facto block on new onshore windfarms remains in place. In the absence of any clear purpose, the Sunak government wants us to understand it as an administra­tion dealing with almost impossible crises, and therefore compelled to relegate climate action to the margins. The ban on fracking was upheld for purely electoral

reasons: everything else, it seems, must be subjugated to a renewed drive to secure domestic supplies of fossil fuels, and a mess of prejudice and irrational­ity that deems any credible climate action as a threat to our very way of life.

Which brings us to something that plays a massive role in post-Brexit Tory politics: that cacophony of reactionar­y noise that comes from the Tory backbenche­s, the rightwing press, and braying voices privileged with both column inches and airtime, not least on the wondrous GB News. Cop27 has given them yet another pretext to combust with anger. Last week, one of the summit’s key issues triggered a particular­ly visceral attack of fury, when the necessity of channellin­g finance to developing countries suffering the worst effects of a heating world – a complex subject, involving government­s, multinatio­nals, and such institutio­ns as the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund – was reduced to paranoid fantasies about the British government sending “untold billions” to undeservin­g government­s that should actually be thanking us for the wonders of industrial­isation. Here was another instalment of that endless hysteria about “foreign aid”, replete with the nastiness it always involves.

There are many Conservati­ve MPs who find that kind of talk deeply distastefu­l. But their party is now downstream of the forces and voices responsibl­e, and it is soaking up the same reactionar­y populism that defines the post-Trump US Republican­s and many of the far-right parties that have drasticall­y changed politics in Europe. On its fringes, Tory politics has always incubated elements like that. But when they opened their doors to the kind of politics embodied by Nigel Farage, the Conservati­ves began really absorbing the credo common to such parties as the Sweden Democrats, the Finns party, Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d, and the Brothers of Italy, the party that now leads its country’s government – all forces that hyperventi­late about immigrants and refugees, aim at pulling their respective countries away from “globalism”, and either downplay or reject the need for serious climate action.

There is a very good book that explores all of this, published last summer: White Skin, Black Fuel, authored by the Swedish academic and activist Andreas Malm, and a group of “scholars, activist and students” called the Zetkin Collective. It roots the right’s climate politics in things that are as much psychologi­cal as political: nostalgia for an age of empire founded on coal and oil, a yearning for the machismo of heavy industry, and a view of the global south as a deep threat. The latter’s climate-based suffering must be othered and ignored, and its people have to be shut out, even as climate breakdown makes large-scale human movement more inevitable than ever. Malm and his co-writers summarise the essential credo of the 21st-century right thus: “We have to defend ourselves again; we must take what is ours out of the ground; the enemy is Marxist and Muslim and Jewish and here comes his next attack.”

Passages about the UK begin with the observatio­n that in this country, “the far right is repeatedly reconstitu­ted inside the main conservati­ve party”. And as you read what follows, the similariti­es between key strands in modern Toryism and 21st-century populists – and fascists – pile up. The flatly strange belief that onshore wind turbines are a threat to civilisati­on links Conservati­ves to Donald Trump, Marine Le Pen, and Hungary’s Viktor Orbán. Five years ago, a key figure in Norway’s Progress party summarised the need to extract oil from even pristine waters crucial to cod stocks with the insistence that “we will pump up every last drop” – almost exactly the words recently used by Jacob ReesMogg about hydrocarbo­ns in the North Sea. Outwardly, Sunak is the epitome of “globalism”, but his politics are shaped by a party that now routinely speaks a language indistingu­ishable from that of the far right elsewhere – witness Braverman railing against “cultural Marxism”, dreaming of flying refugees to Rwanda and insisting that we should “suspend the all-consuming desire to achieve net zero by 2050”.

Given their apparently likely defeat at the next election, a spell of introspect­ion and soul-searching awaits the Tories. Or perhaps not: whether the Conservati­ve party has any appetite for the gravity of the climate crisis and the anxieties of voters beyond an ageing and reactionar­y core is an interestin­g question. Amid fires and floods, and an electorate whose fears about a heating world will only increase, will it find a way back towards reality? Or is its trajectory now set: beyond Thatcher, past even Johnson, into a political netherworl­d it will share with the most disreputab­le and dangerous people?

John Harris is a Guardian columnist

 ?? Illustrati­on: Matt Kenyon/The Guardian ??
Illustrati­on: Matt Kenyon/The Guardian

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