This story was originally published by Grist and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Deskcollaboration. Even before President-elect Donald Trump’s return to the White Hous
Joe Biden's climate change agenda was a surprising success — and a cautionary tale for future Democratic leaders.
For most environmentalists, the day that Donald Trump got elected president in November was “a dark day.” But there was one small, overlooked corner of the movement that celebrated. In a statement congratulating Trump on his victory,
While California politicians and the New York Times blame “climate change” for the disastrous wildfires in Los Angeles, the blame actually lies with those
New York state Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal said he’s going to “supercharge” his push for a corporate climate disclosure measure, similar to one adopted in California, that would require all large companies to disclose their planet-warming emissions, including “Scope 3” pollution from financing and lending activities.
The youth climate group wants bans on super PAC spending in primaries and corporate lobbyist donations to the DNC.
As Democrats and progressives reach the acceptance phase of their grief, there is less uniformity in cooperating with the next Trump administration.
Thousands gather in Washington D.C. for the People's March, advocating for reproductive rights, climate change and more ahead of Trump's inauguration.
I wish I could say the sheer lack of action with the Biden administration was surprising, but it was hardly unpredictable and there’s a reason Cornel West
Ore., about his new book, "It Takes Chutzpah: How to Fight Fearlessly for Progressive Change," which is part memoir and part strategy guide.
Some of the jobs roped into the American Climate Corps have funding locked down for much of Trump’s term. Zampaglione’s program, the Forest Corps, has $15 million in funding from the U.S. Forest Service that should last it five years, according to Ken Goodson, the director of AmeriCorps NCCC, which recruits young adults for public service.
A Tesla Cybertruck joyride with Elon Musk’s biggest fans - How can a group of climate-conscious, liberal-leaning Tesla superfans in Silicon Valley support the Trump-Musk alliance? Josh Marcus took a c