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The Home of Evolutioneers

Environment is uniting left and right

"I have formed relationships with members of the other party based o­n our interest in the environment," said Rep. James Saxton of New Jersey, o­ne of the most pro-environment Republicans in Congress, according to the League of Conservation Voters' annual scorecard. "I'm still o­n the conservative side, and they're still what I'd call liberal, but we now have a kind of bond that you get with people you work closely with."

Conservatives such as pro-gun hunters and antiabortion evangelicals are making common cause with pro-abortion-rights, gun-control liberals o­n land conservation, pollution, and endangered-species protection.

"We've heard a lot about the death of environmentalism, but I think what we're seeing is the rebirth of environmentalism. We're going back to where we were in the 1970s," said Deb Callahan, president of the League of Conservation Voters. "We're building a populist movement."

"You have a new politics overlaid o­n the old that talks about the environment," said Robert J. Brulle, associate professor of sociology and environmental policy at Drexel University. "About 70 percent of the issues still break down along the old lines, but for 30 or 40 percent of them, the traditional left-right dichotomy doesn't work anymore.

"The strangest bedfellows I've ever seen are Earth Firsters and evangelical Christians."

Brulle said the blurring of ideological lines o­n the environment is apparent in Washington: "When you look at this Congress, it's easily the most conservative in 50 years, but the Clear Skies bill didn't even make it out of committee and the opening up of ANWR (Arctic National Wildlife Refuge) won by a single vote."

At the ballot box, o­n issues such as land preservation, water quality, renewable energy and public transit, American voters crossed party lines to approve about 75 percent of environment-related ballot measures last November.

Most Americans - 61 percent - say they are active in the environmental movement or sympathetic toward it, according to a 2004 Gallup poll. Thirty percent said they were "neutral" toward environmentalism in 2004, up from 23 percent in 2000.

In "red" Montana, voters rejected a proposal to repeal a 1998 ban o­n cyanide leaching, a gold-mining method. The debate pitted concerns about water pollution against proffered economic gains from mining.

Colorado voters, who put their state in the "red" column for Bush, also approved a measure requiring electric utilities to obtain 10 percent of their energy from renewable resources by 2015. And they elected a Democratic U.S. senator, Ken Salazar, whose slogan was "our land, our water, our people."

In conservative Gwinnett County, Ga., where 66 percent of voters picked Bush, voters by the same margin approved a o­ne-cent sales-tax increase to pay for $85 million to protect open space. In Indian River County, Fla., voters went overwhelmingly (61 percent) for Bush, and even more overwhelmingly (67 percent) for spending $50 million to preserve open space. Nationwide, 162 of a record 217 land-preservation ballot measures were approved, according to the Trust for Public Land, a land conservation organization.

And most evangelical Christians, a pivotal conservative group for Bush in the last election, say they favor strict rules to protect the environment even if they cost jobs or result in higher prices, according to the 2004 National Survey of Religion and Politics.

The evangelical association's manual o­n public policy says, "We are not the owners of creation, but its stewards, summoned by God `to watch over and care for it.' This implies the principle of sustainability; our uses of the Earth must be designed to conserve and renew the Earth rather than to deplete or destroy it."

Hunters and fishermen, typically conservative in politics, can be a powerful pro-environment force. In 2003, sportsmen's groups succeeded where traditional environmental groups had failed in lobbying the Bush administration to scrap plans to reduce protections for isolated wetlands - critical habitat for fish and wildlife and essential to waterfowl and duck hunting.

"Our interests sometimes merge," said James D. Range, chairman of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, a coalition of hunting and fishing organizations.

"The lesson that environmentalists really need to learn is that when you're talking about environmental protection, you have to frame it for the audience and community that you're trying to reach," DiPeso said. "You need to show tangible, concrete benefits that are relevant to people's lives. It's time to bring environmental benefits back to earth."

"We are translating what people already know and feel into action," said Ernest Cook, senior vice president and director of conservation finance for the Trust for Public Land "People understand more about the environment than we give them credit for."

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BY PAUL NUSSBAUM
Knight Ridder Newspapers
© 2005, The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.Nike Zoom Flight Bonafide