Posted on 09/08/2019 10:46:28 AM PDT by Signalman
Many of the top Democratic presidential candidates took part in a seven-hour climate change forum Wednesday, but theyre not done talking about it on a nationally televised stage.
Although the Democratic National Committee decided against hosting a single-issue debate about climate change, the issue which is one of voters top concerns will be the subject of another independent town hall in roughly two weeks.
Wednesdays summit was hosted by CNN; on September 19 and 20, MSNBC will air its own climate town hall beginning at 3 pm ET each day. The event, which is cosponsored by the Georgetown Institute of Politics and Public Service, Our Daily Planet, and New York Magazine, will feature some of the candidates excluded from Wednesdays town hall. While CNN limited its invites to candidates at the top of polls, MSNBC will allow all candidates even Republican presidential candidates to take its stage.
At the moment, the following candidates are confirmed to appear:
Sen. Michael Bennett (D-CO) Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) Gov. Steve Bullock (D-MT) South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D) Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro (D) Former Rep. John Delaney (D) Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH) Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) Entrepreneur Tom Steyer (D) Former Gov. Bill Weld (R-MA) Author Marianne Williamson (D) Entrepreneur Andrew Yang (D) The candidates will field questions from moderators Chris Hayes and Ali Velshi, both MSNBC hosts, as well as the audience, which will be made up of college students from the Washington, DC, area and from early primary states like South Carolina. Those not in attendance will be able to watch on MSNBC, Telemundo, and NBC News Now.
CNN and MSNBCs climate town halls came about in response to the DNCs reluctance to hold a single-issue debate completely focused on the matter. DNC officials, including Chair Tom Perez, repeatedly argued that climate change, while important, did not warrant its own night of debate, and that such a debate would unfairly advantage climate-change focused candidates like Gov. Jay Inslee (who has now dropped out of the presidential race).
Activists, and many Democratic candidates, pushed the DNC to host a climate debate anyway. It refused to do so, voting against the idea officially in August. The committees rules, however, allow candidates to take part in non-DNC sanctioned discussions as long as they are not onstage together engaged in back-and-forth. Taking advantage of this, CNN and MSNBC scheduled climate town halls that feature candidates speaking one at a time.
Most of the candidates scheduled to appear have developed their own climate change plans, a number of which were released in the days ahead of the CNN debate. While Republican Bill Weld does not, he has said climate change is one of the reasons he is primarying President Donald Trump, and he told Voxs Jane Coaston he is particularly concerned with rising ocean levels.
We are required to plan for a 7-foot storm surge right now in the city of Boston for any waterfront development, he said. In another few years, thats going to be 14 feet. This is going to be a lot of property thats going to be shorefront property in 2040 thats not shorefront property now.
Some of the Democratic candidates, including Sanders, Buttigieg, and Booker, will have a chance to further discuss their climate change plans at the third Democratic debate on September 12. However, the televised debates dont always give candidates the best platform on which to detail their ideas; as Voxs Umair Irfan has noted, in the prior two rounds of presidential debates spanning more than eight hours, climate change received just 35 minutes of airtime.
The next climate town hall, then, will give candidates especially those not invited to the third debate, like Williamson and Ryan their last chance for some time to directly address national voters and lay out clear, succinct visions for fighting climate change without any interruptions. Vox has laid out 10 questions moderators could ask to make that happen.
Can Weld name one place where the sea level has risen?
Youre right. Polls have shown consistently that this is at the bottom rung of voter concerns. Proving once again, as if we needed further proof, that the press just makes it up as they go along. Theyll say anything to advance the narrative, and whether it happens to be true is not a concern
The title must be wrong, no Republicans there at all.
HAHAHAHAHA!! FUNNIEST pic EVER!!!! Thanks for posting!
Actually, that's some bad logic right there.
Required to plan--first 7 feet then later 14--does not imply rising sea levels but just stricter standards.
Storms in Massachusetts Bay have historically gotten up to 20-25 feet waves crashing on shore. Now, not very often, but it happens about once in a century.
Doesn't prove nor disprove global warming.
It’s gonna take a REALLY big glacier.
Watching this, I feel like Im in the Twilight Zone.
The one republican should be Trump. Crash the party.
Lemme guess...Mittens?
Nothing like a little bias to promote your propaganda!
Bill Weld? Ha ha ha ha you’re kidding right?
they are absolutely insane, and will be wondering how Trump got reelected when everyone they know hates him.
they are absolutely insane, and will be wondering how Trump got reelected when everyone they know hates him.
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