This story was originally published by Grist and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. Tuesday was a great day at the ballot box for the planet, with climate-friendly initiatives and candidates winning nationwide.
Democratic election wins last week reignited arguments on how — or if — candidates should discuss climate change on the campaign trail.
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How politicians and businesses should talk about clean energy and climate change in a cost-of-living crisis
The nonprofit, founded by a former corporate marketing executive who wanted to help tackle the problem of climate change, sees clean energy as a brand—not in the traditional sense of a company’s brand, in the sense that the phrase “clean energy” evokes a certain feeling and a shared public understanding. That brand is strong, Howard says.
Mikie Sherrill launched her successful New Jersey campaign with a promise to freeze utility bills and accelerate solar power in the state.
Climate choices aren’t just individual actions. Sometimes actions in groups, like voting, petitions and protests, can have a far larger impact than one person can have alone.
Zohran Mamdani will need to enforce the city’s building decarbonization law, enact his green school policy and handle the climate change-related issues residents often face—like flooding and extreme heat.
NSW Liberal Women’s Council vice-president Adelaide Cuneo rightly explains that by walking away from net zero climate commitments, the Liberal Party will lose a generation of voters (“If Libs dump net zero,
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