Surge in young Republicans worried about the environment: survey
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[August 29, 2019]
By Anthony Deutsch
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - A growing majority of
U.S. Republicans, especially younger voters, are worried that human
behavior is damaging the planet, according to a survey of global
attitudes to the environment conducted by an Amsterdam-based polling
agency.
President Donald Trump, a Republican, has said he will pull the United
States out of the 2015 Paris climate accord involving nearly 200
countries and has reversed environmental protections put in place by his
Democratic predecessor Barack Obama.
Trump skipped a meeting on climate change during last weekend's G7
summit in France and said he would not let "dreams" undermine U.S.
dominance in fossil fuel production.
The new report by Glocalities, which canvassed views worldwide, showed
the number of U.S. Republicans who said they "agreed" or "strongly
agreed" with the statement "I worry about the damage humans cause the
planet" rose by 11 percentage points to 58% between 2014 and 2019.
The number of Republican voters aged 18-34 who are worried about the
issue rose by 18 percentage points to 67%, said the poll, which also
showed a 10 percentage point increase among all U.S. Republicans who
said they tried "to live eco-consciously".
"When looking deeper into the data it becomes clear that the highest
rise in environmental concern (worldwide) is visible among younger
Republicans," said Glocalities pollster Martijn Lampert, who predicted
that shifting views on the environment would influence the next U.S.
election in 2020.
"If Donald Trump keeps on denying climate change and refrains from
standing up for the environment he won’t be able to increase support
among the young and be heavily reliant on older generations of
Republican voters for winning again," Lampert said.
"It will be very hard for him to broaden his base."
YOUTH ACTIVISM
The survey showed concern about the environment among U.S. Democrat
voters at 83%, up nine percentage points, ahead of the 2020 presidential
election.
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Fissures that opened up under a highway during a powerful
earthquake that struck Southern California are seen near the city of
Ridgecrest, California, U.S., July 4, 2019. REUTERS/David McNew
In the United States overall, 69% of people canvassed said they
backed the statement about human beings harming the planet, up 8
percentage points.
In all 20 countries that took part in the survey - including
Germany, China, France, Britain and Brazil - the average level of
concern stood at 77%, up 6% since 2014.
A wave of youth-led climate activism has erupted in many parts of
the world this year, partly inspired by Swedish teen activist Greta
Thunberg, who arrived in New York on Wednesday in a sailing vessel
ahead of a U.N. summit next month to discuss global warming.
The global trend study has surveyed nearly 190,000 respondents in
four stages since 2014, with a margin of error of +/- 0.5 percentage
points. U.S. polls surveyed nearly 2,200 respondents, with a margin
of error of +/- 2.2 percentage points.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll in December found that 69 percent of Americans
believe the United States should work with other nations to curb
climate change, including 64 percent of Republicans and 80 percent
of Democrats.
Those findings were rejected by Trump. The White House said the
report relied on faulty methodology and that the next assessment of
the threats posed by climate change would be more transparent and
data driven.
(Additional reporting by Matthew Green in London; Editing by Gareth
Jones)
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