‘Reckless decision’: experts, officials and lawmakers decry Trump administration’s rollback on landmark climate filing – live

‘Reckless decision’: experts, officials and lawmakers decry Trump administration’s rollback on landmark climate filing – live


Experts, officials and lawmakers decry Trump administration’s rollback on landmark climate finding

Dharna Noor

In response to the Trump administration’s rescission of the endangerment finding – the landmark determination that greenhouse gases are detrimental to public health and welfare –several experts, officials and lawmakers have condemned the move.

“This EPA would rather spend its time in court working for the fossil fuel industry than protecting us from pollution and the escalating impacts of climate change,” said Gina McCarthy, former Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) administrator, who now chairs America Is All In, a coalition of climate-concerned states and cities in the US.

Former secretary of state John Kerry called the new rule “un-American”.

“Repealing the Endangerment Finding takes Orwellian governance to new heights and invites enormous damage to people and property around the world,” said Kerry, who also served as Joe Biden’s climate envoy. “Ignoring warning signs will not stop the storm. It puts more Americans directly in its path.”

Gavin Newsom, the California governor, said in a statement: “If this reckless decision survives legal challenges, it will lead to more deadly wildfires, more extreme heat deaths, more climate-driven floods and droughts, and greater threats to communities nationwide – all while the EPA dismisses the overwhelming science that has protected public health for decades.”

Today, Trump described the endangerment finding as “the legal foundation for the green new scam”, which he claimed “the Obama and Biden administration used to destroy countless jobs”.

“This is all part of the Trump administration’s authoritarian playbook to replace facts with propaganda, to enrich a few while harming the rest of us,” said Rachel Cleetus, senior policy director for the climate and energy program at the science advocacy group the Union of Concerned Scientists. “Administrator Zeldin has fully abdicated EPA’s responsibility to protect our health and the environment.”

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Key events

Trump continues to make excuses for racist video of Obamas posted on his account

Asked by Weijia Jiang of CBS News on Thursday if he has “fired or disciplined that staffer who posted the video from your account that included the Obamas,” Donald Trump said that he had not.

The president then went on to excuse the racist clip, which depicted Barack and Michelle Obama as cartoon apes, as a reference to the Lion King, an animated film which has no apes in it.

The video posted on Trump’s Truth Social account late at night spliced together part of a documentary that presented conspiracy theories about the 2020 election as fact, and a few seconds of the racist animation of the Obamas.

As Trump sought to downplay the abject racism his White House initially defended, before blaming on an unnamed staffer, he described the video as a “fairly long video, they had a little piece that had to do with the Lion King.” The entire video was, in fact, just over a minute.

In Trump’s telling that racist video was not a problem because it had already been widely seen online. “It’s been very well- it’s been shown all over the place, long before that as posted,” Trump claimed, apparently referring to the full-length animated clip the racist depiction of the Obamas was taken from, in which he was depicted as a lion.

“But that was … a very strong piece on voter fraud,” Trump added, of the video laying out baseless conspiracy theories, “and the piece that you’re talking about was all over the place, many times, I believe for years.”

Trump’s vice-president, JD Vance, also dismissed concerns about the racist video on Wednesday, telling reporters in Azerbaijan that, because he was traveling, “the controversy had started and then died out before I even paid attention to it.”

Vance then repeated Trump’s own false claim that the video, which was up for 12 hours, was taken down as soon as the racist imagery was discovered. In fact, the White House press secretary initially defended the video and it remained on Trump’s account for hours until it was deleted after even Republican supporters of the president denounced it as a racist.

“You know, the president said a staffer posted a video, he hadn’t even watched the whole thing, when he watched the whole thing he took it down,” Vance said. “It’s not a real controversy.”

“Should he apologize for posting a video and then taking it down? No I don’t think so,” Vance said. “I think people post things on social media and if you post something and you don’t like it, you can take it down.”

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