“She spoke on climate. She is into it,” enthused one lawmaker.
“She was incredible,” swooned another, a climate-minded senator.
“Hillary Clinton wants to run on climate. And she thinks Democrats should too,” blared a headline in National Journal.
By Wednesday afternoon, word of Hillary Clinton’s closed-door luncheon this week with House and Senate Democrats was everywhere. But while the Democratic presidential candidate covered a long list of hot-button issues, her climate change policy — quite literally the hottest issue of all — seemed to dominate the political reactions.
The only problem is, well, Hillary Clinton doesn’t actually have a climate change policy.
RELATED: That new ‘ice age’ study is hot air
There are precisely five mentions of the word on her entire campaign website, none particularly illuminating. There’s talk of “adapting for tomorrow” with “domestic action” and “intensive global engagement” on “the global threat of climate change.”
How exactly will all this happen? Clinton doesn’t say.
There%20are%20precisely%20five%20mentions%20of%20the%20word%20on%20her%20entire%20campaign%20website%2C%20none%20particularly%20illuminating.%20′
Her competitor Bernie Sanders brought up that lack of detail in his own impromptu press conference in the Capitol on Tuesday. For the socialist junior senator from Vermont, it’s unacceptable for Clinton to smile-and-wave her way through issues of “planetary” importance. All the major environmental groups are likely to feel the same way.
“Our movement is looking for a candidate who has the political courage to move us off fossil fuels in time to avert catastrophic global warming,” Karthik Ganapathy, a spokesperson for 350 Action, said in an email. “Given her murky history on this issue, Hillary Clinton needs to do a lot to show us that’s her.”
“We aren’t going to give her a demerit for failing to give a big climate speech by this date,” added Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club. “But we are looking for an agenda that’s bold, ambitious, and — hopefully — coming soon.”
There’s no doubting that Clinton appreciates the problem. She’s called climate change “one of the defining threats of our time,” and suggested she’d like to take more money from carbon polluters and funnel it toward clean energy. In a statement to Politico, a spokesperson for Clinton promised there would be more details to come.
RELATED: Shell to drop ‘Oil’ from its name? Um, no.
For now, however, the best we can do is return to the rare details that she’s already put down on the record. There is good news and bad news for environmentalists, and it all starts with a simple fact: Hillary Clinton is very likely to be a third term of President Barack Obama when it comes to climate policies.









