Bob Inglis (R-SC): Climate change, Tea Party, and TrumpListen to his thoughts on the Tea Party, how Congress has changed, and how to get conservatives talking about climate change.
This is the latest in my Former Member series, where I talk to former members of Congress—Democrats and Republicans—to get their perspectives on what it was like to serve, and how things are different then vs. now. Last week, I spoke with Bob Inglis, a former Republican Congressman from South Carolina who served two separate stints in Congress: from 1993 to 1999, and again from 2005 to 2011. He isn’t your typical elected Republican—he works on addressing climate change at RepublicEn.org and endorsed Kamala Harris in 2024. But he served with an ascendant Newt Gingrich and still considers himself a Republican. Give it a listen. Topics from my conversation with Bob InglisWant a transcript of this conversation? Click the “Transcript” tab towards the top of this page.
Feel free to share this post with someone who’d enjoy it. (If you’re reading this email because someone sent it to you, please consider subscribing.) For press inquiries, please contact [email protected]. 1 Point of clarification on something I said in reference to Patrick Witt. While it is likely that we’ve met before—I think I interviewed him at one point while I covered football for The Harvard Crimson and he was the quarterback for Yale—I am honestly not 100% sure. (As the Yale QB, he was at the center of a scandal that made national news. Now, he’s just run-of-the-mill nuts.) But I don’t want to make it sound like I have any personal relationship with him, because I don’t. What I was referring to (inarticulately) was the fact that I know people who knew him in law school, which is true. In any event: Witt ran for the Republican nomination for Georgia Insurance Commissioner and got absolutely smoked despite Trump’s endorsement. |