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Climate crisis affects how majority will vote in UK election – poll | Environment | The Guardian 30/10/19 13'24

Climate crisis affects how majority


will vote in UK election 6 poll
Survey also finds two1thirds of people agree climate is biggest
issue facing humankind

All the day’s politics news = live


Damian
Carrington
Environment
editor
Wed 30 Oct 2019
06.00 GMT

The poll shows the effects of climate change may make a difference at the forthcoming general
election. Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images

A majority of people in the UK say the climate crisis will influence how they vote in the
looming general election, according to an opinion poll, with younger voters feeling
particularly strongly about the issue.

Almost two-thirds of people agreed the climate emergency was the biggest issue facing
humankind, with 7% disagreeing. The poll also asked if “fossil fuel companies, whose
products contribute directly to climate change, should help pay for the tens of billions in
damages from extreme weather events?” Two-thirds of people agreed, with 12% opposed.

In terms of action to tackle the climate emergency, 81% of people backed planting more
trees, 63% supported a Green New Deal – a large-scale, long-term investment in green
infrastructure and jobs – and more than half said it was important to ban fracking.

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Climate crisis affects how majority will vote in UK election – poll | Environment | The Guardian 30/10/19 13'24

Jonathan Church at the environmental law firm ClientEarth, which commissioned the poll
conducted by Opinium, said: “From the student strikes to Extinction Rebellion, people
across the UK are demanding greater action to address the climate crisis.

“Importantly these demands appear strong enough to make a difference at the next
election.”

The poll of 2,000 UK adults aged 18 and over was conducted in September, before the most
recent Extinction Rebellion protests but after a global climate strike that brought millions of
people on to the streets.

More than half of those polled (54%) said climate change would affect how they would vote,
with the proportion rising to 74% for under-25s. The poll also showed support for fossil fuel
divestment, with 60% of people thinking banks and financial institutions should ditch
investments in coal, oil and gas.

In June, the polling company YouGov found public concern about the environment rose to
record levels in the UK after the visit of the school climate striker Greta Thunberg to
parliament and the first major Extinction Rebellion protests in April. The environment was
ranked as the third most pressing issue facing the nation, after Brexit and health but ahead
of the economy, crime and immigration.

The prime minister, Boris Johnson, has said he will chair a new cabinet committee on
climate change, holding departments to account for their actions to combat the climate
crisis.

“I want us to become the cleanest, greenest society on earth, and inspire countries around
the world to follow our lead so that our children can breathe clean air and benefit from the
wonderful flora and fauna of this earth,” he said earlier this month.

The Friends of the Earth chief executive, Craig Bennett, said “The prime minister’s pledge to
make the UK a global leader on the climate crisis will only be realised if slashing climate-
wrecking emissions is at the very heart of every government policy.

“This means scrapping plans for a third runway at Heathrow, halting the multibillion-pound
road-building programme and abandoning support for fossil fuel development at home and
abroad.”

In June, the UK committed to ending net carbon emissions by 2050, when Johnson’s
predecessor, Theresa May, accepted the advice of the government’s official advisory body,
the Committee on Climate Change.

But CCC leaders said they were shocked the UK had no proper plans for protecting people
from heatwaves, flash flooding and other effects of the climate crisis. The Opinium poll
found 58% of people believed the government has done too little to prepare for such
impacts.

The CCC’s annual report also found only one of the 25 emissions-cutting policies the body
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Climate crisis affects how majority will vote in UK election – poll | Environment | The Guardian 30/10/19 13'24

said were vital in 2018 had been delivered in full.

The government’s response to the report was published on 15 October. Chris Stark, the chief
executive of the CCC, said there was “a plan for a plan for emissions reduction, but [it is] still
thin gruel on adaptation”.

Johnson’s Brexit deal and a new environment bill have also been criticised. ClientEarth’s
Karla Hill said: “The deal utterly fails to guarantee the future of environmental standards in
the UK post-Brexit.

“The binding part of the agreement contains nothing about those standards. When coupled
with the environment bill, which also fails to provide a legal block on regression in
standards, among other flaws, it paints a bleak picture for future legal environmental
protection in the UK.”

• The five environmental commitments the Guardian is making

Topics
Climate change
Green politics
General election 2019
news

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