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#WhyWeMarch – Climate Justice Demands and the People’s Climate March

Tomorrow, I’ll be joined by other ActionAid staff at the People’s Climate March. We’re expecting huge turnout to show politicians – those who are inclined to listen and those who cover their eyes and plug their ears – that there’s a mass popular demand for climate action.

We’re part of the Land Rights Now contingent, highlighting the crucial role that indigenous and local communities play in safeguarding forests and farmland from the industrial exploitation that spews greenhouse gases and often violates human rights.

The march will be a big-tent affair, because climate justice is an issue that affects everyone in many different ways and at different levels. In addition to land rights, there will be march groups focused on fossil fuel resistance, food and farm justice, trade justice, labor, youth, renewable energy, and more.

The organizers have gone to great lengths to ensure that the march’s messaging shows how climate change will affect marginalized groups more severely than privileged groups, and that frontline impacted communities should be the primary spokespeople calling for climate action.

But what kind of action do we want to see?

There are many different reasons to march and, similarly, many different demands. As a climate justice organization concerned with the impacts that the world’s most vulnerable people are already feeling, the fact that the U.S. has a huge responsibility to the rest of the world to take the most ambitious climate action possible is at the core of our organizing and advocacy. The U.S. is the biggest historical emitter of climate change-causing greenhouse gases and one of the world’s richest countries.

We want the U.S. to take that responsibility seriously. For the world to have a realistic shot at keeping climate change to manageable levels, the U.S. must implement policies to:

We are not politically naïve. We understand that the Trump administration – an administration that is not only xenophobic and hateful but also fully coopted by big business and fossil fuel interests – will not give any thought to these demands.

We also know that even a future Democratic administration would find them challenging. But that’s exactly the point of a massive People’s Climate March and an ongoing People’s Climate Movement – to put pressure on our leaders, whomever they might be, and force them to take the climate action we all know is necessary.

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