Nov 14, 2013
Not that you'd know it from a survey of congressional Republicans, but research headed by Professor Jon Krosnick, a social psychologist who studied years worth of polling data to reach his conclusions, found that even in the reddest political states, like Texas and Oklahoma, a majority of people not only believe that climate change is negatively impacting their environment but they actually want the government to step in to address the problem.
"To me, the most striking finding that is new today was that we could not find a single state in the country where climate scepticism was in the majority," Krosnick said in an interview with the Guardian's Suzanne Goldenberg.
According to Krosnick, what compels more conservative voters to believe in global warming is neither scientific evidence nor declarations by environmentalists, experts, or lawmakers. Instead, it is their own experience of changing weather patterns.
"Their experience with weather leaves people in most places on the green side in most of the questions we ask," he told Goldenberg. In already warm states in the south--like Texas, Arizona and Kansas--he said, people simply recognize that the weather and seasons are changing within their own lifetimes.
Despite what their constituents might know or accept about global warming, however, Goldenberg notes that "some 58% of Republicans in the current Congress deny the existence of climate change or oppose action to cut greenhouse gas emissions."
Krosnick's findings were presented at a meeting of the House climate change task force this week, complete with maps and a series of factsheets from each state:
STATE FACT SHEETS
According to the Guardian:
States that voted for Barack Obama, as expected, also believe climate change is occurring and support curbs on carbon pollution. Some 88% of Massachusetts residents believe climate change is real.
But Texas and Oklahoma are among the reddest of red states and are represented in Congress by Republicans who regularly dismiss the existence of climate change or its attendant risks.
Congressman Joe Barton of Texas and Senator Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma stand out for their regular denials of climate change as a "hoax", even among Republican ranks.
However, the research found 87% of Oklahomans and 84% of Texans accepted that climate change was occurring.
Seventy-six percent of Americans in both states also believed the government should step in to limit greenhouse gas emissions produced by industry.
__________________________________
Join Us: News for people demanding a better world
Common Dreams is powered by optimists who believe in the power of informed and engaged citizens to ignite and enact change to make the world a better place. We're hundreds of thousands strong, but every single supporter makes the difference. Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will. |
Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.
Not that you'd know it from a survey of congressional Republicans, but research headed by Professor Jon Krosnick, a social psychologist who studied years worth of polling data to reach his conclusions, found that even in the reddest political states, like Texas and Oklahoma, a majority of people not only believe that climate change is negatively impacting their environment but they actually want the government to step in to address the problem.
"To me, the most striking finding that is new today was that we could not find a single state in the country where climate scepticism was in the majority," Krosnick said in an interview with the Guardian's Suzanne Goldenberg.
According to Krosnick, what compels more conservative voters to believe in global warming is neither scientific evidence nor declarations by environmentalists, experts, or lawmakers. Instead, it is their own experience of changing weather patterns.
"Their experience with weather leaves people in most places on the green side in most of the questions we ask," he told Goldenberg. In already warm states in the south--like Texas, Arizona and Kansas--he said, people simply recognize that the weather and seasons are changing within their own lifetimes.
Despite what their constituents might know or accept about global warming, however, Goldenberg notes that "some 58% of Republicans in the current Congress deny the existence of climate change or oppose action to cut greenhouse gas emissions."
Krosnick's findings were presented at a meeting of the House climate change task force this week, complete with maps and a series of factsheets from each state:
STATE FACT SHEETS
According to the Guardian:
States that voted for Barack Obama, as expected, also believe climate change is occurring and support curbs on carbon pollution. Some 88% of Massachusetts residents believe climate change is real.
But Texas and Oklahoma are among the reddest of red states and are represented in Congress by Republicans who regularly dismiss the existence of climate change or its attendant risks.
Congressman Joe Barton of Texas and Senator Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma stand out for their regular denials of climate change as a "hoax", even among Republican ranks.
However, the research found 87% of Oklahomans and 84% of Texans accepted that climate change was occurring.
Seventy-six percent of Americans in both states also believed the government should step in to limit greenhouse gas emissions produced by industry.
__________________________________
Not that you'd know it from a survey of congressional Republicans, but research headed by Professor Jon Krosnick, a social psychologist who studied years worth of polling data to reach his conclusions, found that even in the reddest political states, like Texas and Oklahoma, a majority of people not only believe that climate change is negatively impacting their environment but they actually want the government to step in to address the problem.
"To me, the most striking finding that is new today was that we could not find a single state in the country where climate scepticism was in the majority," Krosnick said in an interview with the Guardian's Suzanne Goldenberg.
According to Krosnick, what compels more conservative voters to believe in global warming is neither scientific evidence nor declarations by environmentalists, experts, or lawmakers. Instead, it is their own experience of changing weather patterns.
"Their experience with weather leaves people in most places on the green side in most of the questions we ask," he told Goldenberg. In already warm states in the south--like Texas, Arizona and Kansas--he said, people simply recognize that the weather and seasons are changing within their own lifetimes.
Despite what their constituents might know or accept about global warming, however, Goldenberg notes that "some 58% of Republicans in the current Congress deny the existence of climate change or oppose action to cut greenhouse gas emissions."
Krosnick's findings were presented at a meeting of the House climate change task force this week, complete with maps and a series of factsheets from each state:
STATE FACT SHEETS
According to the Guardian:
States that voted for Barack Obama, as expected, also believe climate change is occurring and support curbs on carbon pollution. Some 88% of Massachusetts residents believe climate change is real.
But Texas and Oklahoma are among the reddest of red states and are represented in Congress by Republicans who regularly dismiss the existence of climate change or its attendant risks.
Congressman Joe Barton of Texas and Senator Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma stand out for their regular denials of climate change as a "hoax", even among Republican ranks.
However, the research found 87% of Oklahomans and 84% of Texans accepted that climate change was occurring.
Seventy-six percent of Americans in both states also believed the government should step in to limit greenhouse gas emissions produced by industry.
__________________________________
We've had enough. The 1% own and operate the corporate media. They are doing everything they can to defend the status quo, squash dissent and protect the wealthy and the powerful. The Common Dreams media model is different. We cover the news that matters to the 99%. Our mission? To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. How? Nonprofit. Independent. Reader-supported. Free to read. Free to republish. Free to share. With no advertising. No paywalls. No selling of your data. Thousands of small donations fund our newsroom and allow us to continue publishing. Can you chip in? We can't do it without you. Thank you.