CCLers use media to make climate election issue
With the midterm elections just over a month away, CCL volunteers nationwide are working hard to push the issue of climate change in candidates’ platforms and fellow voters’ minds. To date, CCLers have conducted 1,144 nonpartisan election season activities since June, charging ahead toward our national goal of 2,000 by election day on Nov. 8. Some of those election season activities have been media placements, such as letters to the editor and news coverage. Volunteers such as Juli Douglass-Gillespie in Wooster, OH, Rick Rappaport from Tucson, AZ, and Isabella Rivera Efimov in Dallas - Fort Worth, TX, have all used the media lever to emphasize climate. “Just voting your party line is no guarantee the people you vote for actually care about the effects of climate change on your children, your job, your health and agriculture in this state,” Juli wrote. “If the candidate cares, she/he will have specific statements available online to read.” You can read more about the latest election media efforts on the CCL blog. Make sure you’re doing everything you can to make climate an election issue. You can check out the Get Loud, Take Action page for more information on actions you can take.
In other news this week: • Rep. Deutch retires from Congress: Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL) officially submitted his congressional resignation letter on Monday to effectively leave office on Friday. Rep. Deutch was a trailblazer for climate action in Congress and was an ally of CCL. You can thank Rep. Deutch for all of his hard work in this tweet from CCL. • LTE topics updated: CCL has updated our new letter to the editor topics. These new topics cover events such as the Kigali Amendment, hurricane season, and many more. See them all here and get started writing your own letter. • Reflecting on a successful Inclusion Conference: CCL held a historic Inclusion Conference last month. You can read all of the highlights here. • Calling all volunteers 50 and older: AARP recently released a survey to gauge the political concerns of Americans 50 and older. This is your chance to tell AARP all about your climate concerns! If you’re 50 or older, you can fill out the AARP survey here. |