- Billionaire and retiring California governor demand action
- America’s year of extreme weather – in pictures
Michael Bloomberg
slammed Donald Trump’s inaction on climate change on Sunday and said
any candidate for president in 2020 – he himself might be one – must
have a plan to deal with the problem.
At the same time, retiring California
governor Jerry Brown likened the fight against climate change to the
fight against Nazism during the second world war, saying: “We have an
enemy … perhaps very much devastating in a similar way.”Both men appeared on NBC’s Meet the Press. The billionaire former New York mayor said: “It would be a lot more helpful if we had a climate champion rather than a climate denier in the White House.
“You know, I’ve always thought Trump has a right to his opinions. But he doesn’t have a right to his own facts.”
A vocal critic of the coal industry, Bloomberg, whose fortune is estimated at $40bn and who spent $100m on his last mayoral race, has said he plans to make climate change a leading issue in the 2020 race, whether or not he runs.
Bloomberg paid his latest visit to Iowa, site of the first voting in the presidential election cycle, earlier this month. Joining him in a call on Sunday to make climate change a national priority was Brown, a presidential hopeful in the past now standing down after 16 years at the head of the Golden state. He said wildfires in California should serve as a wake-up call.
“We see it in the fear in people’s eyes, as they fled, many elderly who died,” Brown told NBC. “This is real, it’s dangerous. And we’ve got to wake up the country, wake up the world.”
Brown, one of the few governors to have implemented climate policy, compared the challenge of galvanizing public opinion to that faced by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1941.
Brown echoed Bloomberg’s criticism of the president.
“He is very convinced of his position,” Brown said of Trump. “And his position is that there’s nothing abnormal about the fires in California or the rising sea level or all the other incidents of climate change.”
Brown contended that US economic wellbeing, conventionally trumpeted by the Trump administration, was the key issue on which Americans should vote.
“We’ve got to get off this idea, ‘It’s the economy, stupid,” he said. “No, it’s the environment.”
Seventy percent of Americans believe “global warming” is happening, according to polling cited by NBC, but only 57% believe climate change is caused by humans.
A rejection of the human role in climate change is a central plank for political leaders who refuse to back environmental regulations and other policies to confront the problem.
“The world is getting hotter,” Bloomberg said. “There are bigger storms than ever before; there are droughts where we used to have floods and vice-versa; our water is getting less; and we’ve got to do something about it.
“The challenge is what we do about it. And the opportunity is the value of what we do.”
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