Climate change rears ugly head as Republicans rally re-election effort
WASHINGTON — Climate change, an issue that has taken a back seat to the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing economic crisis in the United States, is roaring back to the forefront just as Donald Trump’s Republicans begin their sprint to the November presidential election.
Wildfires are ravaging California and twin storms threatened the U.S. Gulf Coast on the very day the week-long Republican National Convention got underway Monday. But neither got any attention from Trump himself, who showed up in person at the party’s roll-call event in Charlotte, N.C., after delegates from across the country confirmed him as the GOP nominee.
“We have to win — this is the most important election in the history of our country,” Trump said during a rambling, off-the-cuff speech loaded with the usual attacks on Joe Biden and the Democrats, whom he accused of manufacturing a controversy over the U.S. Postal Service and mail-in voting.
“This is it: our country can go in a horrible, horrible direction, or in an even greater direction.”

