A recent analysis found that nearly one in four members of the US Congress members deny climate change despite growing public concern over global warming. The study revealed that 123 federal representatives—100 in the House and 23 senators—all Republicans—reject the reality of human-caused climate change.
“It’s definitely concerning,” said Kat So, the Center for American Progress‘s campaign manager for energy and environment campaigns, who wrote the report.
The report classifies climate deniers as those who either reject the existence of the climate crisis, deny it is primarily caused by humans, question the reliability of climate science, or argue that extreme weather isn’t linked to global warming or that greenhouse gas emissions are beneficial.
The report also includes specific examples of such denial from various representatives.
Also read: US lawmakers probe investigation into climate deception by Big Oil
“We’ve had freezing periods in the 1970s. They said it was going to be a new cooling period,” the Louisiana representative Steve Scalise said in a 2021 interview, referencing long-debunked research that is often still cited by climate deniers.
“And now it gets warmer and gets colder, and that’s called Mother Nature. But the idea that hurricanes or wildfires were caused just in the last few years is just a fallacy.”
The research reveals that the US Congress has a disproportionately high number of climate deniers compared to the general public.
While 23% of Congress members reject the climate crisis, only a small fraction of Americans share this view.
Also read: Pressure mounts on Biden administration to halt deepwater oil-export projects
Polls show that fewer than 20% of the public dismiss climate science.
Yale University’s long-term polling indicates that just 11% of Americans are considered “dismissive” of climate science. This contrast highlights a significant divergence between public opinion and congressional representation on climate issues.
More than half of Americans are now “alarmed” or “concerned” about climate change, the Yale surveys find.