How Bill Nye is teaching the GOP to be 'cool' to millennials
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Bill Nye released his new book, 鈥淯nstoppable,鈥 Tuesday, which explains the science behind climate change in a way only "The Science Guy" can do.
And during a series of interviews to promote his book, Mr. Nye says Republican presidential candidates have another practical reason beyond science to leave climate denying in the past: the millennial vote. 聽聽聽
According to a 2014 poll by The Clinton Initiative and Microsoft, millennials than their parents鈥 generation, 76 percent to 24 percent. 66 percent of millennials surveyed say there is 鈥渟olid evidence鈥 that the earth is getting warmer, and of this 75 percent of these climate advocates say warming is caused by human activity.
鈥淲hat happens when you want to get ? Millennials are very concerned about climate change,鈥 Nye said on MSNBC鈥檚 鈥淢orning Joe鈥 Tuesday. 鈥淎re the conservatives just going to let those votes go? Or is somebody going to have an epiphany in the spring?鈥
Letting millennial votes 鈥榞o鈥 isn鈥檛 something that any presidential candidate can afford to do. A Pew Research survey from January predicts the millennial generation (between the ages of 18-34 in 2015) will surpass the Baby Boomer generation (between the ages of 51 and 69), reaching 75.3 million people .
And a study by the Democracy Corps and NextGen Climate suggests millennial voters prefers a candidate who supports climate action to one who denies climate change by 50 points.聽
鈥淎n overwhelming margin of millennial voters 鈥 including Republicans 鈥 say climate change denial would make them less likely to support a candidate 鈥 with more than 41 percent saying it would regardless of their other positions,鈥 the study reports.聽
Only of millennial voters want to see a Republican win the presidential election in 2016, according to a poll by the Harvard Institute of Politics. In the 2012 presidential election between President Obama and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, Mr. Obama carried of the youth vote compared to Mr. Romney鈥檚 30 percent. In fact, Romney would have won four key swing states (Florida, Ohio, Virginia, and Pennsylvania) in 2012 if the Republicans had persuaded millennial voters, a collective loss that some say cost Romney the election.
The correlation between a field of GOP candidates who deny climate change, and a lackluster millennial following, is hardly a coincidence, says Nye.
" 鈥β 鈥 maybe one of these people will go out on his or her own, thinking for him or herself, and say, 'You know, I鈥檝e been thinking about this and climate change is a very serious problem. So if I鈥檓 president, we鈥檙e going to address climate change,' " Nye says in an interview with Salon last week.
Nye applauds Obama鈥檚 decision to dedicate Monday to the United States鈥 global role in climate change.