"No one can escape this
challenge by themselves. There is no wall that can protect any country,
regardless of how powerful it is."
Monday, December 02, 2019
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro
Sánchez kicked off COP 25 in Madrid, Spain on Monday by condemning the
"handful of fanatics" who continue to deny the reality of the climate
crisis as it wreaks havoc across the globe and threatens to render large
swathes of the planet uninhabitable.
Sánchez, leader of the
Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) and proponent of a Green
New Deal for Spain, did not condemn any nations or world leaders by name.
But Sánchez implored the international community to combat "alternative
facts," an apparent shot at the administration of U.S. President
Donald Trump.
For years, several versions of
climate change denial were in circulation," said Sánchez. "Today,
luckily only a handful of fanatics deny the evidence. No one can escape this
challenge by themselves."
"There is no wall that
can protect any country, regardless of how powerful it is," Sánchez added
in another thinly veiled jab at the Trump White House, which took the first
step toward withdrawing the U.S. from the Paris climate accord last
month.
Sánchez said Spain
will "lead by example" by crafting climate policy that phases out
fossil fuels with sufficient urgency while ensuring a just transition for
workers and vulnerable communities.
The PSOE emerged victorious in
parliamentary elections in April and November after
running on a Green New Deal platform. Following its November win, the PSOE
agreed to form a coalition with the left-wing Podemos party as the far-right,
climate-denying Vox party quickly gained
ground in parliament.
As HuffPost's Alexander
Kaufman wrote Sunday,
"if Sánchez's center-left vision of a Green New Deal could be criticized
for not being ambitious enough, the inclusion of the anti-austerity Podemos
could make the country the first to seriously attempt the kind of Green New
Deal progressives elsewhere have laid out to curb soaring economic inequality
and planet-heating emissions."
"Green New Dealers on
both sides of the Atlantic argue that addressing both crises at once is key to
staving off a resurgent neo-fascist right wing," Kaufman wrote.
During his speech on Monday,
Sánchez stressed the
importance of ensuring that the "ecological transition" away from
fossil fuels is fair and equitable.
"It must be the lever of
change against inequality, it must imply justice and equity," said
Sánchez. "Our country has assumed that mandate and is determined to act.
Progress, if not sustainable, does not deserve to be called progress."
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