Labour challenge Tory climate change denial at PMQs

Rebecca Long Bailey MP, Labour’s Shadow
Business Secretary, standing in today for Jeremy Corbyn at Prime
Ministers Questions (PMQs), has highlighted climate change denial at the
top of the Tory party and fears that the next Prime Minister will be
unwilling to tackle the climate emergency

New research from Labour reveals that 15 of Theresa May’s current and
former cabinet ministers are implicated in climate change denial,
including Tory leadership favourites Boris Johnson and Environment
Secretary Michael Gove.

On Tory leadership candidates, analysis found that:

• Boris Johnson, Andrea Leadsom and Michael Gove have previously denied climate science.
• Dominic Raab, Matt Hancock and Esther McVey were linked to individuals or organisations promoting climate change denial.

Boris Johnson has referred to global warming as a “primitive fear”
that is “without foundation”. As Education Secretary, Michael Gove
opposed teaching climate science in school, with his spokesperson
dismissing climate science as “a particular political or ideological
point of view”.

On serving and former cabinet members, analysis also found:

• Three current cabinet ministers have previously denied the
scientific consensus on climate change: Environment Secretary Michael
Gove; International Trade Secretary Liam Fox; and Transport Secretary
Chris Grayling.
• Three other cabinet ministers have close financial or professional
links with organisations and individuals promoting climate change
denial: Health Secretary Matt Hancock; Chief Secretary to the Treasury
Liz Truss; and May herself.
• Four of May’s former cabinet ministers have denied climate science:
former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson; former Brexit Secretary David
Davis; Leader of the Commons Andrea Leadsom; and former Defence
Secretary Chris Grayling.
• Five other former cabinet ministers were linked to individuals or
organisations promoting climate change denial: former International
Development Secretary Priti Patel; former Conservative chairman Patrick
McLoughlin; former Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey; and former
Brexit secretaries David Davis and Dominic Raab.

In recent months the government has been subject to mounting
criticism for ignoring the science on climate change. Last year leading
climate scientist James Hansen accused government energy policy of
“aping Trump”, while this March the High Court ruled government fracking
policies unlawful for failing to take into account scientific evidence.

Rising public pressure forced the government into a humiliating
U-turn last month when it belatedly accepted a Labour motion to declare a
climate and environment emergency. But this analysis will raise fresh
fears about the scale of climate change denial in the Conservative Party
and whether it is capable of taking the necessary action to tackle the
climate crisis.

Rebecca Long Bailey MP, Labour’s Shadow Business Secretary, speaking at PMQs, said:

“How much authority does the government really have on climate change?

“Three current ministers ‘have denied’ the scientific consensus on climate change.

“And several of those standing in the Tory leadership contest, have
close links with organisations and individuals ‘promoting’ climate
change.”