TED Talks Daily - Why isn't the climate movement voting? | Nathaniel Stinnett
Episode Date: August 1, 2024Millions of people say they care deeply about climate change ... yet they're not showing up at elections to turn their concern into political power, says environmental voting advocate Nathani...el Stinnett. He explains why increasing voter participation is essential to advancing the climate movement and shows how his team is mobilizing millions of new environmental voters — without talking about climate change at all.
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where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hu.
Climate change is affecting all of us in profound ways all over the world.
And yet only a tiny percentage of voters who turn out to vote
consider it a top priority at the world. And yet only a tiny percentage of voters who turn out to vote consider it a top priority at the polls.
In his 2024 talk,
Environmental Voter Project founder Nathaniel Stinnett
presses the case for climate-concerned Americans
to actually show up at the polls.
And the kind of significant impact
higher turnout could make.
That's coming up after the break.
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And now our TED Talk of the
day. I've worked in politics for over 20 years, and one of the biggest barriers we face when
addressing the climate crisis is a lack of political will to enact all the climate solutions
that we already have. Whether it's energy permitting, pollution regulation, tax codes,
building codes, you name it, the reason so little is getting done is often because it's easier to
win elections by ignoring the climate crisis rather than addressing it. In the United States,
and that's my focus today, much of this is due to political spending
by fossil fuel companies and other special interests.
And currently, there just aren't enough climate voters
in the United States to overcome that spending
and get politicians to do what science tells us is necessary.
I believe, however, that we can overcome this problem, and we can dramatically
increase the number of climate voters, and that we can do so without having to convince
millions of people to start caring about climate change. In fact, we may not even have to talk
about climate at all. The problem is this. We don't have enough climate
voters in the United States, and that's largely because millions of environmentalists don't
bother to vote. For instance, in the state of Georgia, 66% of registered voters voted in the 2020 presidential election.
But according to voter models, only 58% of climate voters voted.
That's an 8% undervote from people who care about climate change in a state where the election was only decided by 0.2 percentage points.
Another example, in Pennsylvania and Nevada, two crucially important swing states,
people who skipped the last midterm election were twice as likely to list climate as a top priority
as people who said they were going to vote in that election. In short, the climate movement isn't voting.
And this has a real impact on the electorate.
When we look back at exit polling data from the 2020 presidential election, ultimately, only 4% of voters listed climate change as their top priority.
22 midterm polls showed the same thing, 4%. And when so few voters prioritize climate
change, two really important things start happening. First, it becomes incredibly hard to elect climate
leaders. But second, even when climate leaders do win elections, it isn't like they can then just
snap their fingers and get everything they want
done. No, they still need to pick and choose what to spend their political capital on, and they ain't
going to spend it on the thing that only four percent of voters list as a top priority.
And here's the final reason why this lack of voter demand for climate leadership is so problematic.
Politicians know whether you vote or not.
That's right.
Who you vote for is secret.
But whether you vote or not, in the United States, that's public record.
And with limited time and limited money, the most important decision any political
campaign makes is who to talk to and who to ignore. And when you literally have public voter
files that tell you by name and street address which people have a history of voting in the
election you're trying to win, well, who do you think political campaigns talk to?
Likely voters.
And who do you think they poll
to figure out what issues to prioritize?
Likely voters.
And the non-voters?
Well, they get ignored.
And I know that sounds cynical,
but let's be honest. Does Starbucks care about people who don't drink coffee?
No.
Does Toyota market cars to little kids who aren't old enough to drive?
No.
Companies market their products to people who are likely to buy them.
And politicians market themselves to people who are likely to buy them. And politicians market themselves to people who are likely to vote.
And they literally know who those voters are by name and street address
because it is public record.
All right.
So why is this relevant to the climate movement?
Because remember, when we look at the people who are voting,
very few of them list climate as their top priority.
But when we look at the non-voters, the people who campaigns typically ignore, well, it turns, we estimate that as many as 8 million climate-concerned Americans
skipped the 2020 presidential election.
8 million in an election where the Electoral College
was decided by just 44,000 voters in three states. In short, the climate movement isn't voting.
And this is having a significant impact.
And now, back to the episode.
We don't have a political persuasion problem.
We have a voter turnout problem.
And as frustrating as that is,
I'd like to suggest to you that it's also an enormous opportunity
because we live at a moment in time
where it's become almost impossible to change
people's opinions about anything, but especially climate change. Yet these millions of non-voting
environmentalists, they don't need their opinions changed. They just need their behavior nudged so they start voting. And I won't claim that's easy. Of course
it's not easy. But it is easier. And it is also testable. Because the existence of public voter
files means that you can run messaging experiments and then after the election, look up and see which ones actually got
environmentalists to start voting. And so that's the focus of our work at the Environmental Voter
Project. We focus on identifying millions of non-voting environmentalists and then using
non-partisan messaging to turn them into new voters
and eventually consistent voters.
It's a three-step process.
First, we need to find these nonvoting environmentalists.
Now, obviously, we can't interview every single American,
but we can poll huge numbers of people,
isolate the ones who list climate as their top priority, every single American. But we can poll huge numbers of people,
isolate the ones who list climate as their top priority,
and then build highly accurate models to find other people like them.
Step two, we need to get them to start voting.
And to do that, behavioral science tells us
the best way to get an environmentalist to vote
is not to talk about climate change.
In fact, we shouldn't even try to convince them of the importance of voting.
Instead, we should treat them as social animals
who are trying to fit into societal norms
rather than as rational animals
who need to be convinced of the value of their one vote.
And so we use techniques like FOMO, fear of missing out,
telling environmentalists that each year more and more of their peers are voting,
so don't be left behind.
Or we'll knock on their door, ask if they intend to vote.
Most people will be embarrassed and they'll say yes.
And then we'll follow up with them right before the election, remind them of that pledge,
and equate the act of voting with whether they're an honest person who keeps their promises or not.
We will even mail people copies of their personal voting histories. Yeah, pretty aggressive, huh?
Well, so is the climate crisis. And this stuff works. These norm-based messages and other
strategies have increased turnout among our target voters
by as much as 1.8 percentage points in general elections,
3.6 percentage points in primaries,
and 5.7 percentage points in local elections.
And those are huge numbers in this business.
I mean, 1 or 2% is everything in politics.
And the final step is to build long-term voting habits. And to do that, you can't
just talk to these environmentalists once every two years when there's a big federal election going on.
No, we are active in over 250 elections each year, federal, state, and local, because yes,
voting can become habitual. And remember those public voter files? Well, they can become habitual.
And remember those public voter files?
Well, they're not static.
Once we get an environmentalist to vote,
it almost immediately becomes public record and then dozens of campaigns race
to start talking to that environmentalist
because they're now a voter.
And they start getting polled too
to figure out what issues they care about. Ultimately, this is how we build an unstoppable
block of climate voters that can move policymaking across the political spectrum.
Because even in this hyper-partisan time, there is still one thing
that unites all Democrats and Republicans, and that is, boy, do they all like winning elections.
I mean, nothing, nothing motivates a politician more than the prospect of winning or losing
an election, so they always go where the voters are.
It's just the brutal arithmetic of how democracy works. Either you go where the votes are,
or you don't get to be a politician. So now it's incumbent upon us in the climate movement
to build this unstoppable block of climate voters. And it's increasingly clear that
we can do so without having to convince millions of people to change their minds about climate
change. In fact, we may not even need to talk about climate at all. Thank you.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb. If you know me you know i love staying in airbnbs when
i travel they make my family feel most at home when we're away from home as we settled down at
our airbnb during a recent vacation to palm springs i pictured my own home sitting empty
wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on
Airbnb? It feels like the practical thing to do, and with the extra income, I could save up for
renovations to make the space even more inviting for ourselves and for future guests. Your home
might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host. That was Nathaniel Stinnett speaking at TED's Countdown Bloomberg Green Festival in 2024.
If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This episode was
produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green,
Autumn Thompson, and Alejandra Salazar.
It was mixed by Christopher Fazi-Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Taubner,
Daniela Balarezo, and Will Hennessey.
I'm Elise Hugh.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
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