As Donald Trump prepares for his second term, some Republicans are quietly working on climate initiatives that align with party principles of economic growth and innovation.
In short:
- Trump’s agenda includes rolling back Biden-era climate policies, expanding fossil fuels and leaving the Paris climate agreement, but a subset of Republicans is advocating for climate action through an economic and innovation-focused lens.
- State-level successes under Republican leadership, like renewable energy policies in Arkansas and Utah, suggest bipartisan approaches are possible, especially when tied to economic benefits.
- Groups like the Conservative Climate Caucus promote "America First" climate solutions, aiming to make clean energy competitive globally while avoiding culture war rhetoric.
Key quote:
“Climate change is less polarizing than we think. Let’s notice that, and say that out loud, and work with that.”
— Matthew Burgess, environmental economist at the University of Wyoming
Why this matters:
Finding common ground on climate policy could bridge political divides and foster long-term, bipartisan solutions. Economic framing may help Republicans contribute to global climate efforts.