U.S. Democrats and Republicans can’t even agree on the weather: Reuters/Ipsos
Send a link to a friend
[July 25, 2019]
By Maria Caspani
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Only 200 miles
separate Michael Tilden and Miranda Garcia in rain-soaked Iowa. But they
are worlds apart when it comes to their opinion of the weather.
Garcia, a 38-year-old former journalist and Democrat from Des Moines,
thinks flooding has been getting worse in the state, which just came out
of its wettest 12-months on record. Tilden, a 44-year-old math teacher
and Republican from Sioux City, thinks otherwise: “I’ve noticed
essentially the same weather pattern every single year," he said.
Their different takes underscore a broader truth about the way Americans
perceive extreme weather: Democrats are far more likely to believe
droughts, floods, wildfires, hurricanes and tropical storms have become
more frequent or intense where they live in the last decade, according
to a Reuters/Ipsos poll https://tmsnrt.rs/2XY4s9j.
The divergence shows how years of political squabbling over global
warming - including disputes over its existence - have grown deep roots,
distorting the way Americans view the world around them. The divide will
play into the 2020 election as Democratic hopefuls seek to sell
aggressive proposals to reduce or even end fossil fuel consumption by
drawing links between climate change and recent floods, storms and
wildfires.
Nearly two-thirds of Democrats believe severe thunderstorms and floods
have become more frequent, compared to 42% and 50% of Republicans,
respectively, according to the poll.
About half of Democrats, meanwhile, think droughts, hurricanes and
tropical storms are more common in their region, versus less than a
third of Republicans, according to the poll.
Similarly, nearly seven in 10 Democrats said in the poll that severe
weather events such as thunderstorms have become more intense, compared
to 4 of 10 Republicans. And nearly half of Republicans said there has
been no change in the intensity of severe weather over the past decade,
versus a fifth of Democrats.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online in English between June 11
and 14 and gathered responses from 3,281 people. It has a credibility
interval, a measure of precision, of 2 percentage points up or down.
(GRAPHIC: https://tmsnrt.rs/2XY4s9j )
U.S. government researchers have concluded that tropical cyclone
activity, rainfall, and the frequency of intense single-day storms have
been on the rise, according to data compiled https://www.epa.gov/climate-indicators/weather-climate
by the Environmental Protection Agency.
For example, six of the 10 most active years for tropical cyclones in
the Atlantic basin since 1950 have occurred since the mid-1990s, and
nine of the top 10 years for extreme one-day precipitation events
nationwide have occurred since 1990, according to the data.
“We do expect to see more intense storms," said David Easterling, a
spokesman for the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric
Administration's National Centers for Environmental Information.
An overwhelming majority of scientists believe human consumption of
fossil fuels is driving sweeping changes in the global climate by
ramping up the concentration of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere.
But it is impossible to draw a direct link between the changes in U.S.
weather in the recent past to the larger trend of warming.
[to top of second column]
|
People wade through a flooded street after Hurricane Barry in
Mandeville, Louisiana, U.S. July 13, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman
President Donald Trump has cast doubt on the science of climate
change, saying he believes that research into its severity, causes
and effects is not yet settled. Two years ago he announced the
United States would withdraw from a global pact to reduce carbon
emissions, the Paris Climate Agreement, a deal Trump said could
damage the U.S. economy.
Still, a majority of Republicans believe the United States should
take "aggressive action" to combat global warming, Reuters polling
shows https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-climatechange/americans-demand-climate-action-reuters-poll-idUSKCN1TR15W.
Some Republican lawmakers have offered proposals for "market-based"
approaches to fend off climate change, such as cap-and-trade systems
that would force companies to cut carbon emissions or buy credits
from those that do.
Democrats are pushing more aggressive ideas. Nearly all of the
party's presidential hopefuls, who seek to unseat Trump in next
year's election, have put forward proposals to end U.S. fossil fuels
consumption within a few decades to make the country carbon neutral.
Trump has slammed the idea, saying it would "kill millions of jobs"
and "crush the dreams of the poorest Americans."
PARTISAN GOGGLES
Jennifer Marlon, a research scientist at the Yale Program on Climate
Change Communication, said the divergence in the way American
perceive the weather is being driven by factors including the news
they consume and their social circles.
Liberals are more likely to expose themselves to news outlets and
people who believe climate change is an urgent threat that affects
current weather patterns. For more conservative Americans, the link
between weather and climate change is "not a typical conversation,"
Marlon said.
Last year, the Yale program - which carries out scientific research
on public knowledge about climate change - set out to map the
partisan divide on how people perceive the effects of global warming
across the United States.
It found that 22% of Republicans reported personally experiencing
climate change, compared to 60% of Democrats.
Scientists and researchers at the University of Michigan, the
University of Exeter and others came to a similar conclusion in a
2018 study which found that political bias and partisan news
reporting can affect whether people indicate experiencing certain
extreme weather events.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Brian
Thevenot)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |