Democrats and global warming A RECENT sketch on Saturday Night Live suggested how the world would be if Al Gore had won the presidency in 2000. In the last six years we have been able to stop global warming, intoned Mr Gore. No one could have predicted the negative results of this. Glaciers that once were melting are now on the attack. Nerdy environmentalism is Mr Gore s forte. He would have ridden that hobby horse in the 2000 campaign, according to Joe Klein in Politics Lost , if his political consultants had not muzzled him. Now, almost alone, he has brought his favourite issue back into the political spotlight. His film about the horrors of global warming, An Inconvenient Truth , opened this week in Los Angeles and New York. With it comes inevitable talk of another try at the presidency. Mr Gore consistently waves that away. But other prominent Democrats are raising their voices for the cause. This week Senator Hillary Clinton urged action on global warming in a big speech on energy policy in Washington, DC. Notably, she praised Mr Gore as a committed visionary on global warming for more than two decades . Last week, her husband Bill told graduates at the University of Texas s public affairs school in Austin-as temperatures outside soared to 34C-that Climate change is more remote than terror, but a more profound threat. Do voters care? Although a Gallup poll this spring found that 67% of respondents thought the quality of the environment was getting worse , climate change is hardly in the class of Iraq or health care. And it is still rare for politicians to mention it on the stump. Bill Ritter, the Democratic nominee for governor in Colorado, notes that global warming is a worry for the ski industry in his state-but says his audiences care more about the quality of their water or their air. Most midwestern politicians nowadays cannot talk enough about alternative fuels, but they link them to the economy rather than climate change, hoping for a boost for local corn or soyabean farmers. |