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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Environment
Callum Jones in New York

New breed of climate protesters vows to take fight to ‘cowards’ of US politics

Members of Climate Defiance hold a banner on a stage that reads
Climate activists disrupt an Economic Club of New York appearance by Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell on 19 October. Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

A climate protest group backed by a cadre of Hollywood film-makers is preparing to take action against “cowards” and “criminals” of all political stripes as the 2024 election approaches.

Climate Defiance, which disrupted events featuring a string of Biden administration officials this year, and targeted Darren Woods, CEO of ExxonMobil, in December, will consider protesting at events staged by both Democrats and Republicans on the campaign trail after concluding that its “very disruptive” action was bearing fruit.

In an interview, Michael Greenberg, the group’s co-founder, told the Guardian it will also focus “more and more” on state-level demonstrations designed to deter policymakers from approving fossil fuel projects.

Since demonstrating outside the White House correspondents’ dinner in the spring, its activists have staged protests at events featuring a string of senior federal officials, including the transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, and the energy secretary, Jennifer Granholm.

Climate Defiance has also interrupted two separate public appearances by the chair of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell. It is now recruiting for an organizing director to help coordinate “disruptive, nonviolent direct action to resist fossil fuel extraction”, according to a job advertisement.

“If we were a new group asking nicely, we’d be a random no-name group and the White House could just have conversations with groups a hundred times our size who did the same thing,” said Greenberg, 30. “Why would they talk to us?”

People hold a banner that reads
Climate Defiance members protest near the home of the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, in Brooklyn on 30 May 2023. Photograph: Sarah Yenesel/EPA

Instead, the group claims its demonstrations at high-profile events have got it a seat at the table. Ali Zaidi, the national climate adviser, has been on the phone. It also targeted David Turk, the deputy energy secretary, who invited Greenberg to a meeting days later.

“The reason they’re willing to meet with us is they know we are really intense and really strident,” said Greenberg. He said the fundamental goal of his group was to build the climate crisis into a top US political issue, “along with racial justice and kitchen table economic issues”.

The administration is taking note – and Climate Defiance is increasingly confident this interest can be traced all the way to the Oval Office. “Congressman Ro Khanna said that the president is talking about us,” Greenberg added.

A Department of Energy spokesperson said: “To solve the climate crisis, we must engage with a diverse variety of stakeholders. Candid, substantive and constructive discussions among states, local leaders and climate organizations can create paths to work together to address this existential crisis threatening humanity, create economic opportunity for our nations and save our planet.”

The Climate Emergency Fund, which has backed disruptive climate groups including Extinction Rebellion, has provided Climate Defiance with about $225,000 in funding. The group has received “roughly” the same amount from other donors, Greenberg said.

The fund’s directors include the film-makers Rory Kennedy, daughter of former US attorney general and senator Bobby Kennedy, and Adam McKay, director of The Big Short, Vice and Don’t Look Up. Jeremy Strong, the Succession actor, joined the board in December.

As the presidential election campaign intensifies, Climate Defiance plans to deploy its playbook on the trail in an effort to drive the climate crisis up the agenda. “We’ll try to make climate change a top three issue in this election cycle,” said Greenberg.

The group has targeted Democrats in the Biden administration because “they’re the administration in power”, he said. Will it turn its attention to Republican events at polling day draws closer? “We just might,” Greenberg replied, with a laugh. “I will not comment on that.”

A man in a black suit grabs the arm of a woman wearing a shirt that reads
Climate activists interrupt a speech by Jerome Powell at the International Monetary Fund headquarters in Washington DC on 9 November. Photograph: Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images

The Federal Reserve and Powell, a Trump appointee, will also remain in the group’s sights. Climate Defiance wants the central bank to crack down on the lenders financing fossil fuel projects, but the Fed has so far insisted such moves would be “inappropriate”.

“The banks are getting a free pass to torch the planet, and the Fed is doing nothing about it,” said Greenberg. Powell, in his view, is “either asleep at the wheel or in bed with the fossil fuel CEOs”.

While a spokesperson for the Fed declined to comment, Powell’s personal frustration over the protests has been evident. “Just closing the fucking door,” he could be heard saying on a hot mic while he was ushered offstage in November.

Reappearing a few minutes later, Powell did not directly address the protest. “OK, where was I?” he said.

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