2019
May
23
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 23, 2019
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Gary Hirshberg came to Washington this week as a businessperson with a message about climate change: “This is not a partisan issue, period.”

Wait, what?

As founder and chairman of yogurt maker Stonyfield Farm, Mr. Hirshberg knows full well about the partisan chasm that exists in America over this issue. Yet he and other business leaders, representing 75 companies with combined annual revenues of more than $2.5 trillion, believe the time is ripe for bridging that divide. The firms include big ones like PepsiCo and General Mills, plus oil giants BP and Shell.

Citing the risks of human-driven climate change observed by scientists, the business leaders met with members of both political parties yesterday – aiming to engage Republicans especially. The coalition is urging a “price on carbon,” such as a tax on greenhouse gas emissions, to create incentives for the private sector to transition toward a clean-energy economy.

“Investing in reversing climate change is good business,” Mr. Hirshberg said. Or as another CEO colleague told me and other reporters: Ultimately, sustainable business is the only business.

They don’t expect to win results instantly. But it’s a message they expect will resonate over time with Republicans, with a carbon tax being seen as a less-intrusive way for government policy to address what GOP lawmakers are increasingly acknowledging as an issue of genuine concern.

One reason is real-world evidence. (Mr. Hirshberg calls tackling warming temperatures a matter of “dire necessity” for Stonyfield’s cows.) But another reason is changing politics, as a fast-growing cohort of younger voters – including the kids of the CEOs – sees climate action as a top priority for their future.

Now to our stories for today, including a closer look at what’s really driving voter attitudes in Europe, the rising voice of veterans in U.S. politics, and what role humans should play in encouraging the revival of wild wolves.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Courtesy of Mike Waltz
Green Beret Mike Waltz (r.) instructs a member of the Afghan National Police (l., blue shirt) in basic tactics in an undisclosed location. The police were ill-equipped and poorly trained for the isolated paramilitary operations required to combat the Taliban.

Q&A

U.S. Forest Service/AP/File
A female gray wolf and two of the three pups stroll through Lassen National Forest in Northern California. Advocates in Colorado are pushing for a ballot initiative that would direct the state wildlife agency to manage a reintroduction program.

Difference-maker

Courtesy of Hopeworks
Hopeworks youth work on hacking a solution to food access for Camden, New Jersey. Hopeworks couples coding and computer training with life readiness counseling.

The Monitor's View

AP
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi receives a floral garland from party leaders at their headquarters in New Delhi May 23.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Richard Vogel/AP
Dancers from different Los Angeles area schools compete in the Conga Kids Dance Championship at L.A. Live in downtown Los Angeles May 22. Conga Kids serves predominantly Hispanic and African American 10- and 11-year-olds in historically disadvantaged areas. This year 9,000 fifth graders from more than 90 schools competed in the competition.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

That's the Daily for Thursday. We'll be with you again tomorrow, when our package will include first-person secrets of reporting on Capitol Hill.

More issues

2019
May
23
Thursday
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