NEW YORK (Reuters) - Only 200 miles separate Michael Tilden and Miranda
Garcia in rain-soaked Iowa. But they are worlds apart when it comes to
their opinion of the weather.
Garcia, a 38-year-old former journalist and Democrat from Des Moines,
thinks flooding has been getting worse in the state, which just came
out of its wettest 12-months on record. Tilden, a 44-year-old math
teacher and Republican from Sioux City, thinks otherwise: “I’ve noticed
essentially the same weather pattern every single year,” he said.
Their
different takes underscore a broader truth about the way Americans
perceive extreme weather: Democrats are far more likely to believe
droughts, floods, wildfires, hurricanes and tropical storms have become
more frequent or intense where they live in the last decade, according
to a Reuters/Ipsos poll.
The divergence shows how years of political squabbling over global
warming - including disputes over its existence - have grown deep roots,
distorting the way Americans view the world around them. The divide
will play into the 2020 election as Democratic hopefuls seek to sell
aggressive proposals to reduce or even end fossil fuel consumption by
drawing links between climate change and recent floods, storms and
wildfires.
Nearly two-thirds of Democrats believe severe
thunderstorms and floods have become more frequent, compared to 42% and
50% of Republicans, respectively, according to the poll.
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