Current:Home > ContactTom Steyer on Climate Change: Where the Candidate Stands -MoneyBase
Tom Steyer on Climate Change: Where the Candidate Stands
View
Date:2025-04-15 13:41:21
“If you give [corporations] the unlimited ability to participate in politics, it will skew everything because they only care about profits. You know, you look at climate change, that is people who are saying, ‘we’d rather make money than save the world.’ That is an amazing statement, and it’s happening today. And there are politicians supporting that.” —Tom Steyer, July 2019
Been There
Tom Steyer rose to fame as the most prolific Democratic political donor, willing to spend tens of millions to elect candidates committed to action on climate change. But he has divulged little about why he decided to end a successful career managing a multi-billion dollar hedge fund—with investments that included fossil fuel interests—to enter politics and the climate fight.
In a 2014 profile, he told Men’s Journal that he realized, “I really don’t want the highlight of my life to be my success as an investor.” His wife, Kathryn Taylor, said the couple became embarrassed in the mid 2000s that they were profiting from investments in oil companies, while committing themselves to environmental issues. In 2012, Steyer stepped down from his role at the hedge fund, sold his personal fossil fuel assets, and got involved in electoral politics.
Done That
Steyer’s chief climate accomplishments have come through his checkbook. The billionaire emerged as a climate-champion counterpoint to the Koch brothers, the conservative oil barons. In 2013, he devoted millions of dollars to candidates across the country, from the governor’s race in Virginia to county council elections in Washington state, who promised to take action on climate change or oppose fossil fuel development.
He founded the nonprofit NextGen Climate the same year to build a political movement around climate action, working on voter registration and mobilization. Since then, he and Taylor have given nearly $240 million to federal candidates, parties and committees, placing them among the nation’s top donors.
Last year, NextGen backed ballot initiatives in Arizona and Nevada that would require the states to get half their electricity from renewable sources by 2030. Voters rejected the measure in Arizona, but approved it in Nevada. In Michigan, his group withdrew a similar initiative after two utilities agreed to buy 25 percent of their power from renewable sources by 2030.
Getting Specific
- Steyer’s campaign published an extensive “Justice-Centered” climate plan that includes a commitment to declare climate change a national emergency and support for Green New Deal legislation. The plan aims for 100 percent clean electricity by 2040 and net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2045 across all sectors, including homes and buildings.
- Steyer says he would build a community-based network to inform his policies and a “Civilian Climate Corps” that would be funded with $250 billion in bonds over a decade and create 1 million jobs.
- His plan would commit $50 billion to wages and benefits to help fossil fuel workers to “thrive in a cleaner, more inclusive economy.”
- Without mentioning a carbon tax, Steyer says he would eliminate “all forms of government giveaways” to fossil fuel companies, “including unlimited and unpriced global warming pollution.”
- Steyer says he would commit $2 trillion over a decade to make infrastructure more climate-friendly and resilient, which he anticipates would mobilize an additional $4 trillion from non-federal sources. Half of the total would be focused on cleaner energy, industry and buildings, including modernizing the power grid and reducing methane emissions. About $775 billion would go into cleaning up transportation, including expanding electric vehicle charging infrastructure, “electrifying every school bus in the country” and improving public transit.
- His plan also aims to make communities and the military’s infrastructure more resilient to climate change, while supporting efforts to improve disaster planning and response.
Our Take
While climate change was the primary focus of Steyer’s money and activism for years, he has broadened his political scope since Donald Trump was elected president. He launched a new group in 2017 devoted to impeaching Trump, changed NextGen Climate’s name to NextGen America and began promoting his idea of “5 Rights”: to an equal vote, clean air and water, education, a living wage and health care.
In a video announcing his campaign for president, Steyer organizes these issues around a common root problem: corporate influence. His own wealth may be his biggest asset—a spokesman said he’s ready to spend $100 million on his campaign.
Read Tom Steyer’s climate platform.
Read more candidate profiles.
veryGood! (28)
Related
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Plane door opened minutes before landing, leading to immediate arrest of passenger in South Korea
- I Noticed an Improvement in My Breakout Within Minutes of Using This Spot Treatment, I'm Not Even Kidding
- Indian official in hot water for draining reservoir to find his phone
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Canada will be the first country to print warning labels on each cigarette: Poison in every puff
- Saudi Arabia cutting oil output in move that could raise gas prices
- U.S. warship sunk by human-guided kamikaze bomb during World War II found off Japan
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Kelly Clarkson Seemingly Calls Out Ex Brandon Blackstock and Divorce Drama in abcdefu Song Cover
Ranking
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- See Jennifer Aniston’s Relatable Reaction to Learning Friends Co-Star Cole Sprouse Is 30 Years Old
- Man killed by 40 crocodiles that pounced on him after he fell into enclosure in Cambodia
- Many Afghans who fled Taliban takeover two years ago are still waiting for asylum in U.S.
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Kelly Clarkson Seemingly Calls Out Ex Brandon Blackstock and Divorce Drama in abcdefu Song Cover
- Debate over possible Putin visit heats up in South Africa amid U.S. concern over BRICS intentions
- Succession Just Made That Ludicrously Capacious Burberry Bag Go Viral
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Savannah Chrisley Shares How She's Avoiding Negativity Amid Parents Todd and Julie's Prison Stay
Katie Holmes Makes Rare Comment About Daughter Suri Cruise While Reflecting on Dawson's Creek Days
Plot to kill Queen Elizabeth II during 1983 San Francisco visit revealed in FBI documents
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Shop 17 Joanna Buchanan Home Goods That Are Whimsical, Wonderful & Totally You
Riverdale's Camila Mendes Channels Kim Kardashian as She Pokes Fun at Final Season
Man admits killing French woman in drunken shooting game involving hunting rifle, bullet-proof vest