Obama, Climate, History
By Ted Glick
Ted Glick is the National Campaign Coordinator of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. Past writings and other information can be found at http://tedglick.com, and he can be followed on twitter at http://twitter.com/jtglick
It was worth staying up ‘til 2 am last night to
hear Barack Obama’s victory speech. The brother sure can bring it when he is
inspired.
Now it’s time for the climate and progressive
movements to do our job as citizens and demand that he do the same on climate.
It’s time, long past time, for Barack Obama to break his own self-imposed
silence on climate.
When did this silence begin? A piece in last
week’s Guardian newspaper reminded me of how far back it goes, to a meeting the
White House organized for leaders of environmental groups in March of 2009 at
the Old Executive Office building next to the White House. At the meeting,
according to the Guardian, aides to Obama made it clear that they did not plan
to talk much about climate and wanted their supporters to do the same.
As participant Betsy Taylor put it: “’What was
communicated in the presentation was: '’This is what you talk about, and don't
talk about climate change'’. Taylorsaid. I took away an absolutely clear
understanding that we should focus on clean energy jobs and the potential of a
clean energy economy rather than the threat of climate change.’
“The message stuck. Subsequent campaigns from
the Obama administration and some environmental groups relegated climate change
to a second-tier concern.”
And now here we are, at the end of a year which
has seen epic drought, record-breaking heat waves, extensive forest fires,
alarming Arctic sea ice melt and Superstorm Sandy. It is clear that we are now
in a new normal as far as our climate and weather.
As NY Governor Andrew Cuomo said, some parts of
the country are experiencing “100 year storms every couple of years.”
Working with others, I did everything I could up
to the very end to break the silence during the Presidential election campaign.
By and large, we failed as far as the candidates and the debates. Even after Sandy,
Romney said nothing about climate change in his speeches and Obama said very
little.
However, our “end the silence” campaign did
succeed in building buzz in the media about this huge, distressing dynamic. And
it’s absolutely essential that we keep building that buzz, keep building the
pressure, make it impossible for the Obama administration not to speak up and
take action on the rapidly deepening and most important issue human
civilization has ever faced.
What the world needs is for father Barack Obama,
concerned citizen Barack Obama, man of history Barack Obama to internalize that
his legacy, how history and future generations remember him, will be completely
bound up with what he does or does not do going forward on this issue.
Open and strong leadership from Obama on climate
will be a political winner for those politicians who make this a top issue, as
numerous polls this year have shown.
And the world, including many of its political
leaders, would respond positively to version 2.0 of the Obama administration’s
approach in the international arena. The world is crying out, almost literally,
for smart, determined and visionary leadership on the climate crisis.
Starting today, let’s do all in our power, let’s
come together as a movement, to help our re-elected President rise to the
demands of history, our wounded planet and the needs of human society. We
literally can’t accept anything less.
Ted Glick is the National Campaign Coordinator of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. Past writings and other information can be found at http://tedglick.com, and he can be followed on twitter at http://twitter.com/jtglick
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