BREAKING: Trump Announces Major Ceasefire News
Trump Responds to Iran’s Latest Missile Attack
Pro-Illegal Alien Libs Are Going to Be Gutted by Today's Supreme Court Decision
What's This Garbage? The Senate Parliamentarian Just Took a Hatchet to Trump's Big...
30,000 Pounds of Consequences, What the Iranian Nuclear Program Just Got Hit With
From Wall Street to Marx Street, NYC Flirts With Socialism
Scarborough Shocks Viewers with Rare Defense of Trump’s Iran Strike: 'Any President Would'...
Georgetown Professor Sparks Outrage After Saying He 'Hopes' Iran Strikes U.S. Base
Biden Ally Admits Only Trump Had the Guts to Strike Iran, Something He...
'Not a Time for Politics': Speaker Mike Johnson Opposes War Powers Resolution
Vulnerable Dem Exposed: Defund-the-Police Ally Lies About Trump’s Bill, Tries to Hide Radi...
Trump Promises to Campaign Against Rep. Thomas Massie, Who Criticized Iran Strike
Fetterman Pushes Back on AOC's Call for Impeachment Over Iran Strikes
Former Ambassador to Israel: Regime Change Needs to Be From Within Iran
The Iranian Regime Stands at the Precipice
Tipsheet

Gov. Jay Inslee Suggests Voters Responsible For Rising Gas Emissions in Washington State

AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

Washington state governor and 2020 presidential candidate Jay Inslee said that Washington State will be able to tackle the rising greenhouse gas emissions because voters finally gave him a Democratic majority in the state’s legislature.

Advertisement

Inslee went on air with MSNBC host Chris Hayes Tuesday, who asked the governor about his battle with climate change during his work in office.


"We have taken big steps,” Inslee said. “We've now built a wind turbine industry to $6 billion. We're the most per-capita, biggest users of electric cars. We're spinning carbon fiber to go into electric cars. I just got to cut the ribbon of our largest solar farm, and we're making bio-fuels—you can fly airplanes on biofuels now…so we’re doing a lot, but we need to do more."

Hayes interrupted Inslee, saying that he’s heard the governor’s rhetoric before.

"Doing a lot is not enough. This is the whole problem with this problem. I have been hearing you're doing a lot for a long time. They've got to go down," he said.

The Seattle Times reported in January that while Washington state made a plan to decrease gas emissions, “to 1990 levels by the year 2020,” it rose by 6.1 percent between 2012 and 2015. The Washington Department of Ecology said that this was partially due to, “increasing fossil-fuel-generated electricity and a booming economy.”

But Inslee suggested that it was because he wasn’t given enough power to make the big decisions.

Hayes asked how Inslee would respond to people questioning how he can defeat climate-change as president, given that the Republicans hold the Senate.

Advertisement

“Well first off,” Inslee said. “The voters have given me now a Democratic legislature, so for the first time I have a working (majority)… Right now, as we speak, we have several bills, including a 100 percent clean grid, a clean fuel standard that I hope will pass tonight in my House, a super pollutant bill, new building codes for net-zero buildings. So we’re going to move the needle.” He also told Hayes that Congress needs to get rid of the filibuster to, “shake up D.C.” and, “save the planet.”

Inslee said he hopes Hayes will host him again on his show to “pop the champagne corks.”

The Associated Press reported that the state House passed a low-carbon fuels standard Tuesday, which would require fuel producers to, “reduce the carbon emissions associated with their products 10 percent below 2017 levels by 2028 and 20 percent below 2017 levels by 2035.” The bill still needs to go to the Senate.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement