Climate of Contempt
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Reversing the endangerment finding: disaster or inconvenience?

Feb 15, 2026 | Blog, Energy Transition Policy & Policymaking, Partisanship, Elections and the Energy Transition

The EPA recently overturned its so-called “endangerment finding,” the bedrock decision on which Clean Air Act regulation of greenhouse gas admissions rests. What will that mean in practice?  Amidst the Trump Administration’s blitzkrieg assault on the rule of law, it...

“Free trade” is a dirty word in electoral politics, but a freer trade policy would hasten the U.S. energy transition

Jan 8, 2026 | Blog, Energy Transition Policy & Policymaking

One of the few things that majorities of Democrats and Republicans agree upon is that they don’t like free trade. Democrats may not like Donald Trump’s impulsive and sometimes nonsensical approach to tariff policy, but they share with Republicans a belief in using...

Having learning conversations (rather than lobbying conversations)

Oct 31, 2025 | Blog, Energy Transition Policy & Policymaking, Framing and the Energy Transition Debate

Given the Supreme Court that we have, the United States’ transition to authoritarianism can only be stopped at the ballot box. But inside ideological media bubbles there is a disconnect between how people vote and how they feel about our descent into a more...

Private vs Public Provision of Energy Services

Oct 6, 2025 | Blog, Energy Transition Policy & Policymaking

U.S. electric customers are facing sharp rate increases, and they are not happy about it. Climate change is part of the problem, but most of it boils down to market forces: too much projected demand for the projected supply. Those supply and demand projections, in...

Where have you gone David Broder? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you.

Sep 30, 2025 | Blog, Energy Transition Policy & Policymaking, Framing and the Energy Transition Debate, Journalism, Bias & Censored News

Charlie Cook, founder of the Cook Political Report (CPR), wrote a column last month for CPR (behind a pay wall) about gerrymandering that began this way: After 47 years at The Washington Post, Dan Balz recently announced he is stepping back from his role as the...
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