To Westminster: remember climate change?

XR protestors on Lambeth Bridge in 2019. Credit: Stefan Müller
XR protestors on Lambeth Bridge in 2019. Credit: Stefan Müller

In her latest Jackdaw entry, Marie Le Conte argues Westminster politicians are forgetting about one very important issue.

There hasn’t been any oxygen in Westminster for a long time. From 2016 until 2020, anything that was not related to Brexit had little chance of becoming a prominent issue. Since then, anything that hasn’t been related to the pandemic has had even less of a chance of making a dent in the nation’s political discourse.

There was one exception, for a short while; in 2019, people suddenly started caring about the climate emergency. Like them or loathe them, Extinction Rebellion and their striking, original demonstrations captured the attention of the press and the public. Greta Thunberg and her school strikes helped, of course, and for a moment it felt like something was changing.

Polls showed that more and more people thought of the environment as a political priority, and discussions were being had about the drastic lifestyle changes required to keep our planet habitable for the foreseeable future. Different parties had different views, but there was a sense that people were coming together, and realising the scale of the problem.

Then – well, you know what happened. We got stuck indoors for three months and suddenly we ordered everything online, from Britain and abroad, and had it delivered to our homes. Once it was allowed, we went out and drank takeaway pints in single use plastic containers, complete with a single use plastic lid. Those who felt comfortable flying got away as soon as they could, and those who still felt anxious counted down the days until they could jump on a flight. In short: we moved on.

The question is, then: how do we bring back climate change at the top of the agenda, now the country is on the road to recovery? It is not clear that the government has it as a priority, as we saw in the Budget earlier this week.

Not a word was spoken about green policies in the first thirty minutes of Rishi Sunak’s speech, and when he finally got to the topic, it was underwhelming.

Well, the rhetoric was there. “When I look to the future of Teesside, I see old industrial sites being used to capture and store carbon, vaccines being manufactured, offshore wind turbines creating clean energy for the rest of the country”, he said. “I see innovative, fast-growing businesses hiring local people into decent, well paid, green jobs.”

Cynics may point to the party political convenience of making Teesside the centre of the government’s plans, but that is a side point. The issue is the lack of ambition, or rather the lack of bold policies underpinning the ambitious message. Brexit was meant to make Britain a green haven, until we all got distracted. Making these changes a major part of the Covid recovery feels like the last chance we have of acting in time.

This means the government’s opposition, both formal and informal, and in and out of Parliament, must push the topic onto the front pages again. XR managed to alienate most of their soft supporters in the last few months before the pandemic, but there are other players. Labour, most obviously, could and should talk about it as much as possible.

The Liberal Democrats, still wounded by Brexit, could do worse than making it their priority. Campaigners also need to get smart, and fast: they cannot annoy the public into caring about the climate emergency, but the early days of XR showed that street movements can still shift political opinion. If Westminster cannot find it in itself to be radical in pursuit of green policies, the push for change must come from the outside. Time is running out.

MP’s surgeries get an upgrade

Virtual MP’s surgeries are less strenuous and less time-consuming than their face-to-face equivalents. Josh Dell hails the benefits of their digitisation

Put the Donald in the Dock, says Anthony Scaramucci

In 60 days, America should prosecute the outgoing president for the atrocities of his time in office, argues Anthony Scaramucci (Trump’s former head of communications), Alan Blotcky and Seth Norrholm

Disability History Month has brought out my inner Hospitaller

Whilst we applaud the genius of medical science, don’t think ‘special care’ is a modern invention. The roots of free hospital care go back centuries, says William Cash

Where next for Cain, Cummings and the rest?

Don’t have too much sympathy for SpAds on the out. Leaving Whitehall is when the fun starts…