Outright denial has been replaced by something that may turn out to be even worse: delay

As he flew to New York yesterday to speak to the UN general assembly about the Cop26 climate conference, Boris Johnson was asked to defend old comments made by his newly appointed trade secretary, Anne-Marie Trevelyan. Trevelyan had made statements on Twitter in the past decade promoting climate-denial literature, denying climate change was happening at all, and denigrating climate scientists and activists as “doom-mongers” and “fanatics”.

Johnson insisted that these views – despite coming from a minister whose role has serious climate implications – weren’t really such a big deal. In fact, he was himself guilty of similar statements not so long ago. He reminded the public that were we to “excavate some of [his] articles from 20 years ago”, it wouldn’t be difficult to find sentiments that “weren’t entirely supportive of the current struggle”, as he generously put it. “Facts change,” he added, “and people change their minds.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

There are 11,656 athletes at the Olympics. Guy Fraser wanted them all on Wikipedia

Fans across the world enjoy complementing their Olympic viewing with some research.…

The Guardian view on the Queen’s speech: sins of omission | Editorial

By yet again kicking social care reform into the long grass, the…

Ava White: boy, 14, denies murder of 12-year-old in Liverpool

Teenager admits possessing knife but pleads not guilty in fatal stabbing of…