Hillary Clinton portrayed herself as a crusader against climate change Monday, making a moral push for the importance of renewable energy production. Then she glided onto a private jet that burns 387 gallons of fossil fuel an hour, touching down in New Hampshire for another campaign event.
The former first lady’s journey was caught on film by America Rising, which backs Jeb Bush’s bid for the Republican presidential nomination. The group gleefully mocked Clinton for the apparent contraction between her words and deeds.
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“It’s that kind of hypocrisy that makes the majority of voters say Clinton is not honest or trustworthy,” America Rising Communications Director Jeff Bechdel told the Daily Mail about the video. Social media erupted with more mockery.
But the Clinton campaign intends to put that in the past tense with a new pledge: “We are committed to a carbon-neutral campaign,” Clinton spokesperson Brian Fallon told msnbc this morning.
The campaign did not respond to a request for detail, but Clinton’s 2007 bid for the presidency involved a similar pledge.
In that cycle, the campaign said it would take several steps to conserve energy, including “buying 100 percent recycled paper products; recycling paper, glass, cans and cardboard; installing motion-controlled lights to reduce energy when offices are not in use; and locating its headquarters next to a subway station to encourage staff to use public transportation.”
But the biggest portion of the earlier campaign’s carbon-neutral pledge was the purchase of “carbon offsets” through NativeEnergy, a Vermont-based company that produces renewable energy.
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The provided information on its energy use — the square footage of its office, aircraft and ground transportation, hotel accommodations and other sources — and the company calculated the campaign’s total “carbon footprint.” Then, with funds from the Clinton campaign, the company paid for renewable energy production that would not have otherwise existed.
“Yes, NativeEnergy did provide carbon offsets to both Clinton and Edward’s presidential runs,” spokesperson Kevin Hackett tells msnbc. “The Clinton campaign made a strong commitment to offsetting the emissions associated with campaign travel in 2008.”
However, he added: “We have not heard from the campaign.”
He may now.
In the 2008 election, both Republican and Democratic campaigns rushed to put themselves on a carbon diet, following the likes of celebrities (George Clooney, Leonardo DiCaprio) and former vice president Al Gore. The doomed John Edwards campaign lead the way.
“Global warming is an emergency and we can’t wait until the next president is elected to take action,” Edwards said in a 2007 press release. “Each of us can take responsibility in small ways to make a big difference.”









