A lesson of Election 2024: There is no ‘climate voter’

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The next U.S. president will be someone who campaigned on relying more on fossil fuels, not less. 

That result may seem counterintuitive, given that most Americans see climate change as a threat and believe human actions are the cause of it. 

Why We Wrote This

Polls show most Americans view climate change as a threat, but they put pocketbook concerns first. A test for the clean energy transition is to succeed by tying it to economic benefits.

But it’s also not surprising, say many who study the issue. Multiple studies have shown that most voters rank climate or energy policy well below economic concerns and other social issues when it comes to picking political candidates.

This election proved that there “is no ‘climate voter,’” says Roger Pielke Jr., a professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and a nonresident senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute who has long written about climate change and policy.

“It’s up there, but it’s nowhere near immigration, inflation, the economy and things like that,” he says. 

To some extent, the nation’s transition toward cleaner energy sources is already resting on a financial rationale that goes beyond the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Solar and wind power are economically competitive with fossil fuels.  

For people who rank climate change high on their list of societal concerns, the Nov. 5 election result was a sobering one: The next U.S. president will be someone who campaigned on relying more on fossil fuels, not less. 

That result may seem counterintuitive, given that most Americans see climate change as a threat and believe human actions are the cause of it. 

But it’s also not surprising, say many who study the issue. Multiple studies have shown that most voters rank climate or energy policy well below economic concerns and other social issues when it comes to picking political candidates.

Why We Wrote This

Polls show most Americans view climate change as a threat, but they put pocketbook concerns first. A test for the clean energy transition is to succeed by tying it to economic benefits.

This election proved that there “is no ‘climate voter,’” says Roger Pielke Jr., a professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder and a nonresident senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute who has long written about climate change and policy.

He and political scientist Ruy Teixiera, another American Enterprise Institute fellow, conducted a survey of voters in September and found that even those who list climate as an important issue are generally unwilling to pay extra for it.

“It is important,” says Dr. Pielke of voter opinions on climate change. “It’s up there, but it’s nowhere near immigration, inflation, the economy and things like that.”

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