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hatrack

(59,587 posts)
Thu Jan 28, 2016, 09:16 AM Jan 2016

Op-Ed Comedy Gold! "Bush, Rubio Should Act On Climate"

Last year was the hottest by far, scientists have just reported — a finding met by the sound of crickets in the Republican presidential field. It's one thing for these candidates to play to the conservative base. But two contenders, Sen. Marco Rubio and former Gov. Jeb Bush, live in South Florida and should know firsthand about the threats a warming planet poses to their area and state. It's not too much to ask that both parties — and certainly the next occupant of the White House — be willing to engage in a serious discussion about climate change.

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But there has been no sense of urgency in the Republican race to address this phenomenon. As the Miami Herald reported this month, Rubio and Bush are at ground zero in the warming debate, yet neither has called for a robust response to deal with the rising threats. Though Rubio and Bush acknowledge climate science, they downplay man-made influences and dismiss the risks to the nation's security and public health as overblown.

This position might play well with Iowa Republicans, but it doesn't square with the reality that residents face in the neighborhoods that Rubio and Bush call home. Seawater already bubbles through the streets in Miami Beach and along Biscayne Boulevard at high tide. In Miami, as elsewhere in Florida, local officials are looking at ways to protect property, control flooding and safeguard public drinking water supplies as rising seas and other warming-related impacts pose immediate risks.

Conservative voters in the Republican primaries may not be the most receptive audiences, but concern for global warming cuts across party lines. A Pew Research Survey in November, in advance of the global climate summit in Paris, found that 69 percent of Americans surveyed supported government actions to curb emissions. That included half of all Republicans polled. And 55 percent of Republicans said climate change will require people to change their lifestyles. A Gallup poll of self-identified moderate Republicans last year found that two-thirds believed the effects of global warming would be felt in their lifetimes.

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http://www.tampabay.com/opinion/editorials/editorial-rubio-bush-should-act-on-climate/2262874

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