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Andrea McGimsey, Senior Director, Global Warming Solutions, Environment America, 703-477-4722, amcgimsey@environmentamerica.org
Matt Casale, U.S. PIRG Environment Campaigns Director, 609-610-8002, mcasale@pirg.org
Josh Chetwynd, Communications Manager, 303-573-5558, josh.chetwynd@publicinterestnetwork.org
President Joe Biden has wasted no time in following through on several campaign promises related to protecting the environment and addressing climate change.
Among the actions he will take either Wednesday or within the week: require the United States to rejoin the Paris Agreement; cancel the Keystone XL pipeline permit; ban new oil and gas permitting on public lands, including the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; reimpose methane pollution limits for new and existing oil and gas operations; review Trump administration decisions to strip away national monument protections for such iconic locations as Grand Staircase-Escalante, Bears Ears and Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine national monuments; use the federal government procurement system to make facilities more reliant on clean energy and to purchase zero-emission electric vehicles; reestablish a working group on the societal cost of carbon; and begin the process of rescinding rollbacks on vehicle tailpipe emissions standards.
The president will also order the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to review several actions taken over the last four years that weakened clean water protections. These notably include the Dirty Water Rule, which put streams and wetlands at risk; weaker standards for coal ash and toxic pollution from power plants; and the recent update to the Lead and Copper Rule.
U.S. PIRG and Environment America have been at the forefront of campaigns for stronger environmental policies for decades, leading the charge for the adoption of renewable energy, clean transportation and the conservation of our public lands and oceans. In addition, late last year, the groups released "First Things to Fix," a list of environmental actions that the Biden administration should prioritize. With these actions, many of those "first things" are being fixed.
Environment America Acting President Wendy Wendlandt issued the following statement:
"After four years of environmental setbacks, a new day has dawned. Today, President Biden showed us just how serious he is about his campaign promises to protect the environment and take bold climate action. There remains a lot of work to do, but the president has set us on a course toward a greener, healthier future."
U.S. PIRG President Faye Park issued the following statement:
"When we put the environment at risk, we put the health of Americans at risk. Today's actions by President Biden will lead to a healthier environment and healthier Americans. We hope that this marks an inflection point where our federal policies match the nation's desire to build a healthier and safer future for ourselves, our children and our grandchildren."
Additional experts from Environment America and U.S. PIRG issued the following statements on specific climate and conservation provisions:
Climate Change:
Paris Agreement
"By rejoining the Paris Agreement on day one, President Biden is sending a crystal clear signal to all Americans and to the world that the United States will once again lead when it comes to solving the climate crisis," said Andrea McGimsey, Environment America's senior director for Global Warming Solutions. "The days of dirty, fossil fuel-burning, 19th-century technology must be numbered in order to reach a cleaner tomorrow."
Vehicle Emissions Standards
"With this action, there is hope again for cleaner cars and clean air in our communities," said Environment America Destination: Zero Carbon Campaign Director Morgan Folger. "While we transition to zero-emission vehicles, any cars that run on gasoline should have the strongest fuel economy and emissions standards possible to clean up our air and save consumers money. We applaud President Biden for beginning to undo the rollback of our nation's best climate program to date."
Keystone XL Pipeline
"Cancelling the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline is a huge win for public health and the climate," said Matt Casale, U.S. PIRG Environment Campaigns director. "Building new infrastructure such as the pipeline, which would result in millions of tons of new carbon emissions, just adds fuel to a fire that's already burning down our house. We should invest in infrastructure that helps us build a cleaner and healthier America, not infrastructure that ties us to the dirty energy sources of the past."
Clean Renewable Energy
"When the government leads the way on clean energy procurement, it smooths the road for everyone else to follow," said Johanna Neumann, Environment America's senior director for Environment America's Campaign for 100% Renewable Energy. "Directing the federal government procurement system - which spends $500 billion every year - to transition government facilities to clean energy and to purchase zero-emissions vehicles for government fleets will reduce harmful pollution and help speed up the adoption of clean energy technologies."
Methane Regulation
"From the giant methane cloud released last year across to Florida to the ongoing release of this dangerous gas from the massive Permian Basin of Texas, it's clear that we must get polluters under control," said Andrea McGimsey, Environment America's senior director for Global Warming Solutions. "With this new direction, the Environmental Protection Agency is sending a clear message to oil and gas executives: You no longer get a free pass to damage the environment and health of your fellow Americans at your production sites. It's time to clean up your business and act on climate."
Social Cost of Carbon
"From the heartbreaking flooding we've endured in our homes and businesses to the tragedy of entire towns burning down, the damage done by carbon pollution-inflamed climate change to the fabric of our everyday lives is inumerable," said Andrea McGimsey, Environment America's senior director for Global Warming Solutions. "We applaud President Biden for squarely putting the focus back on the social cost of carbon to every American because if we don't consider that part of fossil fuels' impact, we are turning a blind eye to an important facet of the problem."
Conservation:
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
"Our wild spaces are part of the fabric of who we are as Americans and this decision to rethink fossil fuel excavation in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and elsewhere on public lands, represents a keen understanding by the new administration that these priceless places are too special to destroy for any amount of oil," said Ellen Montgomery, Environment America Public Lands Campaign director. "With renewable energy on the rise, we really do not need to drill for oil and gas in special areas such as the refuge. Instead, we can and should focus on protecting our public lands for the good of the species that live on them and for future generations."
National monuments
"Protecting our most spectacular and special natural areas is an important part of our national identity as Americans," said Protect Our Oceans Campaign Director Kelsey Lamp. "From New England's deep sea coral gardens to the soaring spires of the Utah desert, we understand and appreciate the overwhelming value in conserving our natural heritage and safeguarding it for future generations. Recognizing what's at stake, we applaud the president's important first step toward restoring protections for some of our most special places, but know we still have a long way to go to ensure the health of our land and oceans."
Clean Water:
Dirty Water Rule
"By ordering a repeal of the Dirty Water Rule, President Biden has taken a vital step for America's mighty rivers, majestic lakes and vibrant bays -- and for the drinking water of millions of Americans," Environment America Clean Water Field Director Kristine Oblock said. "Wetlands filter out pollutants, provide wildlife habitats and protect communities from flooding. The Dirty Water Rule left half of our nation's remaining wetlands -- as well as streams that feed our greater waterways and help provide drinking water to millions of Americans -- without federal protection. In short, the Dirty Water Rule was the worst rollback in the five decades since the Clean Water Act. We now look forward to working with the Biden-Harris administration to permanently restore federal protections to all of America's waterways."
Lead and Copper Rule
"Lead is a potent neurotoxin that harms the way our children learn, grow and behave, and it has no place in our drinking water," said Environment America Clean Water Program Director John Rumpler. "Yet millions of homes with lead pipes -- and schools with lead-bearing faucets and fountains- - put our children's drinking water at risk. By ordering the EPA to take stronger action to stop widespread lead contamination, President Biden is taking a bold step to safeguard our drinking water. We urge the EPA to order the full replacement of all lead service lines within ten years. Our children's health depends on it."
Coal Ash
"Arsenic, mercury, and lead have no place in the lakes where we swim, the rivers where we fish or the water we drink," Environment America Clean Water Advocate Laura Miller said. "Yet these toxins are contained in the ash from burning coal and put our water at risk. As highlighted in our Accidents Waiting to Happen report, several of these coal ash pits are located in flood zones, creating an additional risk of toxic overflows into our rivers during severe storms. Today, President Biden took action to protect our water from this toxic hazard. Yet more work remains to be done. Our rivers and streams will be much safer once we sweep coal ash into the dustbin of history."
Toxic Water Rule
"Power plants account for 30 percent of toxic discharges to waterways, including arsenic, lead, mercury and selenium -- a cancer-causing substance," Environment America Clean Water Program Director John Rumpler said. "By ordering the EPA to revisit the Trump administration's Toxic Water Rule (Steam-Electric ELGs), President Biden is taking a critical step to protect our rivers, lakes and streams. Hopefully, we can put an end to the absurdity of polluting water to create energy."
With Environment America, you protect the places that all of us love and promote core environmental values, such as clean air to breathe, clean water to drink, and clean energy to power our lives. We're a national network of 29 state environmental groups with members and supporters in every state. Together, we focus on timely, targeted action that wins tangible improvements in the quality of our environment and our lives.
(303) 801-0581"He’s the Jim Cramer of Iran war predictions," said one critic.
Conservative commentator Dave Rubin, who for months has been a top booster of President Donald Trump's illegal war with Iran, was inundated with mockery on Sunday after a viral video exposed months' worth of his failed predictions about the conflict.
The video, which was posted on social media Saturday, begins with Rubin telling viewers to not listen to any of the prognostications being made by critics of the war, which Trump launched in late February without any authorization from Congress.
"I'm pretty good with predictions," Rubin says. "And my prediction here is that everything the media is now going to say about Iran—it's going to close the Strait of Hormuz, and energy prices are going to go crazy—none of this is going to come to pass."
Iran war: greatest hits from the last 12 weeks pic.twitter.com/9pgXyvmsgF
— Dave Rubin Clips II (Parody) - Retired Jan.20/2025 (@DaveClips) May 24, 2026
The video then cuts to Rubin wrongly predicting that gas prices during the conflict "will continue to come down," before switching to claims that Iran lacks the military capability to keep the Strait of Hormuz closed in the face of US military power.
"If the United States wants to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, which it does," says Rubin, "and Donald Trump says we'll escort ships through if we have to, it's going to stay open."
From there, the video shows Rubin hyping of the prospect of Iranian dissident Reza Pahlavi swooping in to take over the country after the war, and then getting fooled by a fake artificial intelligence-generated video of Iranians giving thanks to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for bombing their country.
The video compilation of Rubin's failed predictions drew immediate ridicule from critics.
"He’s the Jim Cramer of Iran war predictions," joked Krystal Ball.
Commentator Adam Mockler wrote of Rubin that "it’s brutal watching him make failed predictions week after week."
Journalist Glenn Greenwald argued that the video should be the last nail in the coffin of whatever credibility Rubin had left.
"Imagine having sat through and listened to all of this Israeli propaganda, which turned out to be (predictably and completely) false," commented Greenwald, "and then thinking there was some value in continuing to listen to this person."
The Bulwark's Tim Miller said that while he knew Rubin was "a smooth-brained hack," he still "couldn’t even fathom how bad these war takes would be."
Political analyst Omar Baddar, meanwhile, said the video should erase any doubt that Rubin is "the dumbest man on the internet."
The Trump administration last week sued Minnesota after it passed a law banning prediction markets from operating in the state.
A Sunday report in The New York Times revealed how the Trump administration is using a key government agency to shut down any efforts to regulate online betting markets such as Kalshi and Polymarket.
According to the Times, the administration has stacked the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) with industry insiders who have systematically "mowed down" staffers at the agency who have expressed interest in providing oversight on prediction markets.
Among other things, the report documented how multiple officials at CTFC have been put on leave simply for asking questions about the betting markets' ties to members of President Donald Trump's family or for having past experience enforcing regulations related to cryptocurrencies.
What's more, the Times found that even being an industry insider isn't enough to guarantee good standing in the agency. Brian Quintenz, who was tapped by Trump to lead CTFC last year, saw his nomination withdrawn after he drew the ire of Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss for refusing to support their cryptocurrency exchange's complaint against the agency.
Revelations about industry insiders rolling over regulators at CTFC come as the Trump administration is fighting any attempts by states to regulate prediction markets.
As explained in a Thursday report from CNBC, the Trump administration is "fighting a multi-front battle to stop the state actions and assert its regulatory authority," with CTFC arguing that it is "the only entity that can regulate" betting platforms.
16 different states are engaged in legal proceedings against the platforms, and Minnesota last week passed a law to ban them outright, which immediately drew a lawsuit from the administration.
The new Minnesota law, which is scheduled to take effect in August, bans prediction markets "from hosting, creating or advertising in the state," according to ABC News.
In an interview with ABC, Minnesota state Rep. Emma Greenman (D-63B) said she authored the legislation because she has grown increasingly concerned about young people in the state seeing their finances drained from placing online bets.
"We're seeing studies come out that say [the companies] are targeting 18- to 21-year-olds," said Greenman, "and we are seeing gambling starting younger and younger."
CFTC Chair Michael Selig last month warned states against trying to regulate prediction markets, which he said would "circumvent the clear directive of Congress."
"Our message to Wisconsin is the same as to New York, Arizona, and others," said Selig. "If you interfere with the operation of federal law in regulating financial markets, we will sue you."
"Nothing was accomplished by Operation Epic Fury except putting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in charge of Iran and the Strait of Hormuz," said one critic of the war.
President Donald Trump revealed on Saturday that he is mulling a deal that would end his illegal war with Iran, and some hawks within the Republican Party are expressing alarm.
According to a Sunday report in The New York Times, many details of the agreement to end the war remain murky, with the fate of Iran's enriched uranium up in the air. US and Iranian officials have also given contradictory messages about the proposed deal's contents, suggesting there is much work still to be done before any agreement is finalized.
Regardless, three hawkish GOP senators on Saturday raised major concerns about the contents of the deal, warning against accepting any agreement that will leave Iran in a stronger position than before Trump illegally launched a war against it without any authorization from Congress in late February.
"If it is perceived in the region that a deal with Iran allows the regime to survive and become more powerful over time, we will have poured gasoline on the conflicts in Lebanon and Iraq," wrote Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), who lobbied Trump to attack Iran repeatedly before the start of the war. "A deal that is perceived to allow Iran to survive and possess the ability to control the [Strait of Hormuz] in the future will put Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Shia militias in Iraq on steroids.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), another longtime Iran hawk, said he was "deeply concerned" about what he's been hearing about the deal and expressed particular worry about Iran getting relief from US sanctions while still maintaining the ability to shut down the Strait of Hormuz.
"If the result of all that is to be an Iranian regime—still run by Islamists who chant 'death to America'—now receiving billions of dollars," Cruz wrote, "being able to enrich uranium and develop nuclear weapons, and having effective control over the Strait of Hormuz, then that outcome would be a disastrous mistake."
Sen. Roger Wicker (D-Miss.) was even blunter in his condemnation of the reported agreement.
"The rumored 60-day ceasefire—with the belief that Iran will ever engage in good faith—would be a disaster," Wicker wrote. "Everything accomplished by Operation Epic Fury would be for naught!"
Ben Rhodes, a former deputy national security adviser for President Barack Obama, challenged Wicker's claims that Trump's illegal war had achieved anything of value.
"Nothing was accomplished by Operation Epic Fury," Rhodes wrote, "except putting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in charge of Iran and the Strait of Hormuz."
Rhodes' criticism was echoed by Stephen Wertheim, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, who wrote that "everything accomplished by Operation Epic Fury is already for naught."
Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at the International Crisis Group, accused the Iran hawks of being delusional for thinking further bombing would force Iran to capitulate.
"DC's Iran hawks got two wars, nearly every conceivable sanction designation, a blockade, threw a wrench in global economy," Vaez wrote, "and will still claim that just a little more pressure and a touch more bombing will magically yield the concessions they still won't be satisfied with."