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Here鈥檚 a primer on how to find elections and environmental champions close to home.
Here鈥檚 a primer on how to find elections and environmental champions close to home. (Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty)

How to Find Your Climate Candidates

Getting involved in local and state elections can lead to big changes in the fight against global warming

Published: 
Here鈥檚 a primer on how to find elections and environmental champions close to home.
(Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty)

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So you, along with hundreds of thousands of other Americans and millions across the world, marched in a climate strike last month. Now what? While there鈥檚听evidence that the protests have听,听they won鈥檛 necessarily translate into laws that close public lands to drilling or protect habitat for endangered species. For that, politicians need to feel electoral pressure.

You might be able to exert that pressure sooner than you think. Though the 2020 election is a long way off, this fall听three states will vote for governors, four will vote on state legislatures, and countless cities will elect councils and mayors. Those races, say activists, are just as important for climate policy as high-profile national campaigns, and they offer opportunitiesto harness momentum from the strikes.

Jenny Marienau, campaign manager for 350 Action, the political arm of the climate-action group ,听says that it鈥檚 common for fossil-fuel companies to invest heavily in local races that rarely get much attention. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen in past elections that mayoral seats and public-utility commissions can have huge effects on national infrastructure,鈥 she says. For instance, in Los Angeles earlier this year, a few of those听 of dollars to defeat a candidate who wanted to close natural gas plants.听

Laura Maunus, policy and legislative coordinator for the Sunrise Movement, a youth-led environmental organization, points to the 2018 New York statehouse elections, when Sunrise helped sweep out a group of center-right Democrats known as the Independent Democratic Caucus. Unseating that group, which had allied with Republicans opposed to environmental legislation, created a majority that prioritized climate action. The new state legislature passed the ,听which regulates greenhouse-gas emissions and invests in green jobs and underserved communities鈥攚hat Maunus calls 鈥渢he most ambitious piece of statewide climate legislation鈥 to date.

鈥淲e need bold action at every single level of government,鈥 says Ezra Oliff-Lieberman, an organizer with Sunrise Louisiana. It鈥檚 not just that these local races are winnable, he says, but in small elections, it鈥檚 possible to make climate change a tangible issue that directly impacts voters. This year听he鈥檚 excited about 鈥渁 sleeper race鈥 for the state鈥檚 agricultural commissioner. One candidate in that race, Marguerite Green, is fired up about small farms, marijuana reform, and sustainable forestry. 鈥淩unning locally means that [Green] can鈥檛 ignore the way in which climate is connected to every issue,鈥澨齇liff-Lieberman says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not going to win in Louisiana if you just say, 鈥楽crew oil and gas.鈥 You win by talking about jobs and food: Green was an agriculture student during Hurricane Katrina听and saw the ways that food systems broke down after the storm.鈥 By connecting grocery bills to climate policy, it鈥檚 possible that Green will be able to bring attention to the issue in a state that鈥檚 both on the front lines of the climate crisis and engulfed听by fossil-fuel companies.

Here鈥檚 a听primer on how to find elections and environmental champions close to home.

Fall 2019

Agricultural commissioner, county executive, the听public-utility board鈥攖hese听aren鈥檛 exactly big-name races.听So where should you go to find information on obscure candidates that might have an听impact on the environment? National environmental organizations have local chapters focused on city and state elections听and are a starting point for finding local climate candidates and volunteering to knock on doors in those contests.

Last year, Sunrise had 鈥攖his year, says Maunus, it has听over 300. Such听hubs endorse and who have rejected fossil-fuel funding and committed to environmental policy at any level.听

Meanwhile, 听are directing local campaigns both in elections and against fossil-fuel development. 鈥淲e want to see candidates committing to stop new fossil-fuel infrastructure. That means ending subsidies, ending new leasing on public lands,鈥 says Marienau.

The Sierra Club, which is also run as a collection of , is particularly interested in state-legislature races in Virginia and North Carolina this year, where fracked gas pipelines threaten to cut across the Appalachian Trail. There are also crucial races happening in the cities of听Aurora, Colorado, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, says a spokesperson, where the group听hopes to press for carbon-neutral efforts at the municipal level.

On the Horizon

Although the presidential primary is well underway, politicians are just beginning to declare Senate campaigns听for 2020. In Massachusetts, Democratic representative Joe Kennedy is听challenging听incumbent Senator and Green New Deal sponsor Ed Markey听in the primary. (Kennedy has also gone on the record supporting the Green New Deal, but Sunrise and other progressive groups have come out for Markey, pointing toward听fossil-fuel holdings in Kennedy鈥檚 investment portfolio.)听

Focusing its attention on those national-level primaries, 350 Action听plans to begin announcing endorsements this month. 鈥淚n the primaries,鈥 says Marienau, 鈥渨e have an opportunity to see candidates make clear commitments on their climate priorities that we can hold them to.鈥

What If I鈥檓 Too Young to Vote?

While you have to be 18 to vote in U.S. elections, you can still volunteer for听a campaign at just about any age. And in a city-council race, for example, which听might attract only a few thousand voters, a couple weekends spent knocking on doors could be critical. According to Marienau,听鈥淚t鈥檚 the small elections that are low-budget and low participation that can really affect what鈥檚 permitted in your area.鈥澨

Lead Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty

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