Friday, October 14, 2016

Climate Change & the GOP: How Facts are Framed

Donald Trump, the Republican candidate for the 2016 Presidential election, has called climate change a hoax created by the Chinese. His running mate, Mike Pence, has recently been interviewed to clarify Trump’s thoughts on climate change and said that he believes climate change is happening naturally – due to natural, normal weather patterns – and not because of any man-made influences such as the emission of greenhouse gasses. Further, he believes that the threat of climate change is nothing more than a political agenda set forth by the Obama Administration and other Democrats. Most Republicans agree with the latter, and that’s what we see in the GOP’s official platform outline which was updated for the National Convention this past July.



Even though the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has said they have a 97 percent certainty on anthropogenic climate change, the American public’s views and opinions on climate change are extremely mixed. According to “Reframing the Climate Change Debate to Better Leverage Policy Change: An Analysis of Public Opinion and Political Psychology” by Terrance M. O’Sullivan, the American public’s confusion is due in part to widespread “political resistance to mitigation measures such as GHG reduction, government environmental regulations, and spending on research and alternative energy subsidies” (318). This resistance comes almost entirely from the GOP.

Source: NASA
In its platform, the GOP does not write off climate change entirely. Rather, it simply places it extremely low in the economic priority list of our nation. Part of its policy reads: “climate change is far from this nation’s most pressing national security issue” (GOP Platform 20). Even though research and statistical data proving climate change exist and are accessible, the GOP misleads its members and frames the science of climate change as a political agenda set forward by the Democratic Party. It frames scientific facts supported by a high percentage of scientists abroad and at home as untrustworthy.

According to Critical Media Studies by Brian L. Ott and Robert L. Mack, framing is a concept within Marxist analysis that is exercised by major media conglomerates and contributes to the undermining of democratic ideals (Ott 51). Framing is simply the lens used by the media or conglomerate by which the audience views the message(s). Typically used with news or entertainment media, I’m applying the concept of framing to the GOP’s platform to look at how scientific data is communicated (or left out) of conversations about climate change, thus resulting in the widespread confusion among US citizens.

Throughout the section “America’s Natural Resources: Agriculture, Energy, and the Environment” in the 2016 GOP Platform, scientific claims that aren’t even explicitly being described in the outline, are labeled as dishonest in a few different instances:

On trade: “We will not tolerate the use of bogus science and scare tactics to bar our products from foreign markets” (17).

On “radical environmentalists”: “Their approach is based on shoddy science, scare tactics, and centralized command-and-control regulation” (21).

On climate change in general: “Information concerning a changing climate, especially projections into the long-range future, must be based on dispassionate analysis of hard data” (22).

In these instances, scientific studies or results that are vaguely introduced are cast off as “shoddy” or “bogus” with zero explanation to how they are misleading or inaccurate. No scientists or scientific institutions (except for the UN’s IPCC) are mentioned. The GOP is framing environmental information in a way that encourages its members to distrust any science that supports climate change because it is all a part of the democratic agenda. Although 195 countries are members of the UN’s IPCC, the GOP claims that the scientists on its board are not reliable in its platform outline:

The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is a political mechanism, not an unbiased scientific institution. Its unreliability is reflected in its intolerance toward scientists and others who dissent from its orthodoxy (22).

It’s odd that the GOP is pointing out here that the IPCC is biased because it doesn’t tolerate scientists who dissent from their stances that climate change exists and the majority of its causes comes from human causes (O’Sullivan). If the IPCC was completely biased, wouldn’t there report claim 100 percent of scientists back climate change as opposed to the 95-97 percent numbers that are used?

The GOP not only frames scientific facts that would lead others away from their policy plans in a poorly-researched way, they frame the “facts” supporting their ideas ineffectually as well. Hardly any claims made in the platform regarding its own stances on the environment are not backed up with facts or data of any kind. Under the “A New Era in Energy” section the platform reads “the Democratic Party does not understand that coal is an abundant, clean, affordable, reliable domestic energy resource” but does not provide support for the claim that coal is clean (19).

Furthermore, under the “Environmental Progress” section, the GOP states that the environment is improving year by year, but provides zero statistical data that that is true (21).

From a Marxist Analysis view of framing, everything relates back to the means of production and where power and control exist in the economy. In the GOP’s platform, it’s obvious that they don’t think environmental efforts are worth tax dollars. They are vehemently against several initiatives that are supported by almost all other developed nations, primarily the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement that the US currently contributes money toward (22). The GOP wants to halt all US government spending to all UN supported initiatives regarding climate change, primarily the Green Climate Fund (22).

Republicans want a small government. They don’t believe in top-down mandates and they think that harsh environmental regulations on corporations will destroy our free-market economy. By framing the facts of climate change in a way that encourages Americans to distrust its government and the science they believe investing in, people are not recognizing the seriousness of environmental issues and will not until the problem affects them directly.


 Works cited:

“Democratic Party Platform 2016.” Dem Convention, July 2016. https://www.demconvention.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Democratic-Party-Platform-7.21.16-no-lines.pdf. Accessed 12 October 2016.
Sullivan, Terrence M. and Roger Emmelhainz. “Reframing the Climate Change Debate to Better Leverage Policy Change: An Analysis of Public Opinion and Political Psychology.” Homeland Security & Emergency Management, vol. 11, no. 3, 2014, pp. 317-336
Ott, Brian L., and Robert L. Mack. Critical Media Studies: An Introduction. 2nd ed. West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons, 2014. Print.
Republican Platform 2016.” GOP, July 2016. https://prod-static-ngop-pbl.s3.amazonaws.com/static/home/data/platform.pdf. Accessed 12 October 2016.

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