The Green New Deal may be divisive, but voters support aggressive climate policies.
According to an interesting explainer over at the Atlantic, most Americans support left-leaning approaches to climate change—though not necessarily the $93 trillion price tag associated with the Green New Deal.
In a poll that avoids use of the term "Green New Deal," five aggressive policies showed noteworthy support:
- A national recycling program for commodities (that would be used to "build new solar panels, wind turbines, cars, and batteries")
- $1.3 trillion to weatherize every home and office building in the United States
- $1.5 trillion for a massive federal build-out of renewable energy
- A climate adjustment fee on environmentally destructive imports
- “Economic Nationalism for Climate Change” (described as a plan to “aggressively encourage large American manufacturing firms to specialize in solar panels, wind turbines, and other climate-friendly technologies.”)
Now, about that price tag:
Only when pollsters told people that a Green New Deal could cost $93 trillion did support for the idea collapse. But according to the GOP group’s own math, a Green New Deal that focused only on climate change could cost only $13 trillion.
See also: A short list of liberal policies that a majority of Americans support.