From David Dayen, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject The climate crisis doesn't care who you're voting for
Date October 16, 2024 10:32 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Read our special issue, out now! ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

??

View this email in your browser [link removed]

The 2024 election is approaching, and the

**Prospect** is committed to delivering high-quality reporting on the stories that matter. As an independent nonprofit magazine, we rely on reader support to make our work possible. We work hard to produce unbiased, fact-based journalism to help you navigate this critical election, but we can't do it without you.

We've set an ambitious goal of raising $50,000 this month to make our work possible. While our readers have stepped up to help fuel our election coverage, we've fallen behind, and we need your help to get back on track and reach our goal! A generous donor has agreed to match all online donations, so your contribution would have an outsized impact.

Invest in democracy. Support the

**Prospect**'s 2024 election coverage today. Click here to make a donation. [link removed]

??

John,

The thing about the climate crisis is that it doesn't discriminate between Democrats and Republicans. Everyone is vulnerable to the ravages of climate change whether they believe in it or not. In most cases, Americans know the solutions-decarbonize, harness renewables, deliver advanced infrastructure upgrades and more. But the response needed isn't happening fast enough, and the divergence in climate responses between red and blue states has intensified. Intrastate disputes compromise goals that affect the entire country and endanger the lives of millions of people. GOP officials publicly celebrate federal funding for state climate and energy projects, while doubling down on trying to undo the very laws that made those public projects possible.

For our October issue, Gabrielle Gurley wrote about how this divide between red and blue states on energy and climate affects the entire country's ability to respond to the climate crisis. GOP-controlled states that are pulling out of interstate compacts are slowing down reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, and the state with the highest emissions, Texas, has its own electrical grid that it won't give up even amidst debilitating demand spikes.

You can read Gabrielle Gurley's piece here. [link removed]

FALLING INTO CLIMATE DISASTER [link removed]

Some Republicans in Congress are beginning to incorporate a particular vision of the labor movement-primarily white male industrial workers-into their rhetoric, but their counterparts on the state level are working to break unions. While Senators Josh Hawley and J.D. Vance bragged about joining the UAW's picket line when they were on strike against the Big Three automakers, state-level Republicans enacted legislation to undermine the UAW and the ability of workers to organize. Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee passed bills requiring companies looking to receive state economic incentives to waive their right to recognize a union based on cards signed by workers. And public sector unions especially are a target of the GOP; in Florida, tens of thousands of public sector workers have had their unions decertified thanks to impossible-to-meet regulations.

In blue states, it's a different picture. In Minnesota, now-VP candidate Tim Walz oversaw a dramatic expansion of labor rights, banning captive audience meetings, expanding what public school teachers are able to bargain for, mandating sick leave for all workers and more. Multiple blue states have enacted legislation to establish collective bargaining rights for workers not covered under the NLRB, like domestic workers.

For our October special issue, Sharon Block and Benjamin Sachs wrote about how when it comes to labor, blue and red states are worlds apart. So long as states remain under partisan control, the outlook for workers is often determined by whether a Democrat or a Republican is the governor. But there are opportunities for workers to win concessions in red states, and voters in several states have passed ballot initiatives to raise the minimum wage and even end right-to-work laws.

You can read the full piece here. [link removed]

THE TRUTH ABOUT THE PARTIES AND LABOR [link removed]

This month, we're releasing a special issue on how state policy has diverged between red and blue states. Depending on where you live, your life expectancy, quality of life and well-being could vary wildly, and states aren't content to legislate policy within state borders. Far-right activists in red states want to impose their vision on the entire country, through the courts, corporate collusion and even political violence. This dynamic is best understood as a cold civil war, and it impacts the health and wellbeing of millions of Americans.

Our special issue is live on our website, covering everything from labor protections, the future of public schools, our politicized courts, the threat of political violence and much more. For just five dollars a month, you can get our award-winning print magazine, published bimonthly, sent straight to your door. And by becoming a subscriber, you'll help power our core editorial mission: telling stories about Ideas, Politics and Power.

Please consider subscribing today. [link removed]

SUBSCRIBE NOW [link removed]

Thanks for being a part of this,

David Dayen
Executive Editor, The American Prospect

[link removed]

??

[link removed]

??

[link removed]

??

[link removed]

??

[link removed]

YOUR TAX DEDUCTIBLE DONATION SUPPORTS INDEPENDENT JOURNALISM [link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Copyright (c) 2024 The American Prospect. All rights reserved.

To opt out of American Prospect membership messaging, click here [link removed].

To manage your newsletter preferences, click here [link removed].

To unsubscribe from all American Prospect emails, including newsletters, click here [link removed].
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis