Amy Coney Barrett refuses to tell Kamala Harris
if she thinks climate change is happening
Supreme court nominee accuses Democratic senator of
soliciting an opinion ‘on a very contentious matter of public debate’
Amy Coney
Barrett pledges ‘open mind’ and plays down conservative record
Guardian
staff and agency
Thu 15 Oct
2020 13.42 BSTFirst published on Thu 15 Oct 2020 06.03 BST
Supreme
court nominee Amy Coney Barrett refused to say whether she accepts the science
of climate change, under questioning from Kamala Harris, saying she lacked the
expertise to know for sure and calling it a topic too controversial to get
into.
On
Wednesday, Barrett framed acknowledgment of a manmade climate crisis as a
matter of policy, not science, when she was pressed at her confirmation hearing
by Democratic senator from California.
Barrett
said Harris, the Democrats’ vice presidential nominee as well as a member of
the Senate judiciary committee, was trying to get her to state an opinion “on a
very contentious matter of public debate, and I will not do that”.
Barrett was
responding to a series of questions from Harris, including whether she thought
coronavirus was infectious, whether smoking caused cancer and whether “climate
change is happening and it’s threatening the air we breathe and the water we
drink”.
The federal
appeals court judge responded that she did think coronavirus was infectious and
smoking caused cancer. She rebuffed Harris on the climate change question,
however, for seeking to “solicit an opinion” on a “matter of public policy,
especially one that is politically controversial”.
The
exchange occurred during the committee’s hearing on Barrett’s nomination to
replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the supreme court.
Scientists
say climate change is a matter of established fact and that the damage is
mostly caused by people burning oil, gas and coal. Climate experts, including
federal scientists in the Trump administration, say increasingly fierce
wildfires, hurricanes and other natural disasters point to the urgency of global
warming.
When Harris
asked Barrett “is climate change happening?” Barrett responded: “I will not
answer that because it is contentious.”
Harris
later tweeted: “Amy Coney Barrett will admit that Covid-19 is infectious.
She’ll admit that smoking causes cancer. But whether climate change is real?
Apparently that’s up for debate.”
Donald
Trump, an ardent booster of the coal, oil and and gas industries, routinely
questions and mocks the science of climate change, while Democratic rival Joe
Biden is proposing a $2tn plan to wean Americans off fossil fuels to tackle the
climate crisis.
The Trump
administration has rolled back major Obama-era efforts to reduce fossil fuel
emissions from cars and trucks and power plants. Many of the administration’s
environmental and public health rollbacks are likely to wind up before the
supreme court.
On Tuesday,
Senator John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican and another member of the committee
considering Barrett’s confirmation, also asked Barrett what she thought about a
series of issues, including climate change.
“I’ve read
about climate change,” Barrett answered.
“And you
have some opinions on climate change that you’ve thought about?” Kennedy asked.
“I’m
certainly not a scientist,” Barrett replied, using a frequent refrain of more
conservative Republicans on the matter. “I would not say that I have firm views
on it.”
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