Climate Hawks Endangered Species

Cartoon character resembling a hawk wearing a red cape, holding a sign that reads 'Save the Planet!' with industrial buildings in the background.

From Science Matters

By Ron Clutz

A political cartoon depicting an eagle labeled 'NATURAL GAS' and a dodo labeled 'WIND & SOLAR,' with the title 'America's Choice' above them.

Danielle Franz writes at Real Clear Energy No Country for Climate Hawks.  Excerpts in italics with my bolds and added images.

Political cartoon depicting John Kerry with an exaggerated facial expression, in front of an American flag, commenting on the Ukraine invasion with a focus on electric vehicles.

Once perched atop the climate movement’s moral high ground, the self-anointed “climate hawks” are now watching their influence dwindle, and nowhere is that retreat more visible than in California. Long the epicenter of progressive climate ambition, the Golden State is now backpedaling. Democrats who once championed aggressive environmental mandates are hitting pause, reworking regulations, and distancing themselves from policies that have driven up energy and housing costs. A post-2024 reality check has swept the party: climate may still poll well in theory, but not when it collides with affordability.

Political cartoon depicting a character in a suit offering a poster for solar panel careers to a construction worker near a private jet marked 'KERRY', with a satirical message about leaving a dirty job.

This shift isn’t isolated. It’s emblematic of the climate hawks’ broader failure — a movement that moralized, catastrophized, and sacrificed working-class livelihoods on the altar of performative virtue. And it didn’t stop with workers. Families were expected to absorb the fallout — higher costs, fewer opportunities, and a more uncertain future — all in the name of climate dogma. For years, these activists dominated environmental discourse by demanding ideological purity.

They mistook loud rhetoric for leadership, performance for policy,
and apocalyptic forecasts for political strategy.

A cartoon depicting climate change myths, with a character expressing different emotions while contrasting the conditions of being in and out of the Paris Accord, concluding that weather can be blamed on Trump.

Thankfully, as The Breakthrough Institute’s Alex Trembath has long forecast, the era of the climate hawk is over. And the climate will be better off for it. As former allies begin to walk away, it’s clear their crowning achievement was turning climate into a culture war they were never equipped to win.

At the heart of this shift is a growing movement that doesn’t
treat energy as a sin, but as a tool of national strength.

An infographic featuring a triangular diagram with the words 'Abundance,' 'Affordability,' and 'Reliability' around the central phrase 'Energy Platform' on a yellow background.

t’s a philosophy that values building over banning, which means restoring industrial capacity, modernizing infrastructure, and investing in the American worker. It rejects the scarcity mindset that tells people they must give up comfort, reliability, or opportunity in the name of climate – so that the next generation doesn’t grow up fearing collapse, but growing into a culture of confidence, responsibility, and renewal.

Instead, it insists that the way forward is to invest in
the backbone of our economy, empower the working class,
and bring energy production home.

An image of Chris Wright, CEO of Liberty Energy, speaking against environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria, with the quote: 'There is no climate crisis, and we’re not in the midst of an energy transition either.'

It recognizes the answer to environmental challenges isn’t less; it’s more. More energy. More innovation. More freedom to solve problems creatively. Instead of forcing society to shrink and sacrifice, we ask how we can grow smarter. Recognizing that climate strategy must also serve the interests of the people, national security, and long-term prosperity, it’s a vision rooted in hope for the future, not austerity.

And there’s a policy consensus emerging.
Clean energy systems need to be affordable and reliable.

A cartoon depicting workers dressed in green overalls installing solar panels labeled 'GREEN JOBS.' One worker is stating 'It's out of gas!!' while another remarks 'Quittin' time!!' with a tax-related gas machine in view.

Rather than relying on long-term subsidies or regulations, domestic policy should be structured to encourage the innovation, commercialization, and deployment of cheaper and cleaner energy resources. This way, American resources and technology can expand energy at home and dominate global markets, while also reducing emissions. Likewise, policy should prioritize climate adaptation. We should empower communities with the tools and flexibility to manage their forests, embrace regenerative agriculture, and resourcefully steward their ecosystems as the climate changes. Our environmental approach should be grounded in the American family and national interest at the center of the conversation.

A cartoon illustration depicting two contrasting characters: on the left, a man in the 1970s wearing a 'SAVE THE WHALES' t-shirt making a peace sign, and on the right, a man in 2023 resembling a politician, wearing sunglasses and a 'SORRY, WHALES' t-shirt standing next to a wind turbine.

What’s replacing the hawks isn’t apathy. It’s realism. A new generation is emerging – leaders who are less interested in preaching and more interested in producing. They view climate not as a moral crusade, but as a challenge of engineering, economics, and national renewal. They understand that the future won’t be built through degrowth or doomerism, but through innovation, adaptation, and strategic investment in America’s strengths.

A graph comparing net electricity demand minus wind and solar energy for two dates: May 27, 2018, displaying the 'Duck Curve', and April 16, 2023, showing the 'Canyon Curve'. The graph highlights changes in energy demand patterns over time.

This isn’t about utopian dreams or global pledges. It’s about reindustrializing the nation, repowering the grid, and grounding environmental goals to serve the American people. That’s how you build lasting support – and get real results.

The climate hawks are facing extinction. And in their absence,
something stronger is finally taking flight.

A political cartoon depicting a muscular Uncle Sam wearing a patriotic hat and flannel shirt, proudly showing a shirt with 'ENERGY DOMINANCE' written on it, with the caption 'AMERICA'S GOING TO WORK'.


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