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Gov. Jay Inslee Says Washington State Is A 'Template For Success' For The U.S.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announces his run for the 2020 presidency at A&R Solar on March 1 in Seattle. He says tackling climate change should be "Job 1" for the next president.
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Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announces his run for the 2020 presidency at A&R Solar on March 1 in Seattle. He says tackling climate change should be "Job 1" for the next president.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee has not been shy about framing his candidacy to become the 2020 Democratic nominee for president around global climate change.

In his policy proposal he says that defeating climate change is the "defining challenge of our time," and that it is incumbent upon the next president of the United States to make that challenge a priority.

"It does call for a president to make this Job 1, because if it is not Job 1, it won't get done," Inslee told NPR. "We have to understand if we don't solve the climate crisis, it will prevent us from dealing with all of our other hopes and challenges."

Inslee also pointed to his state as a model for how economic growth and progressive policies like fighting climate change do not need to be at odds with one another.

"We have shown that we have developed the best economy in the United States which [has] the fastest GDP growth and the fastest wage growth, not despite the fact that we're embracing clean energy, but because we are embracing clean energy," he says.

Inslee spoke with Morning Edition as part of the show's Opening Argumentsconversations, exploring the presidential candidates' core messages.


Interview Highlights

On why more people are paying attention to climate change

People are increasingly sympathetic because they're understanding. They're watching Paradise, Calif., burn to the ground; they're watching the Midwest be inundated by floods; they're watching Miami Beach having to spend taxpayer money building up the roads because of inundation, and it is the reality and the science that is convincing people rather than just rhetoric or ideology. ...

This is the existential threat and it does call for a president to make this Job 1, because if it is not Job 1, it won't get done. We have to understand if we don't solve the climate crisis, it will prevent us from dealing with all of our other hopes and challenges.

On why his record in Washington is a model for the United States

There are multiple tools in the tool box [and] there are many policies that we can adopt. We've seen them work in other jurisdictions and other nations. And now we've put them in place in the state of Washington. And my state I believe is a template for success for the United States in our climate policies as well as all the other progressive things we have done.

We have shown that we have developed the best economy in the United States which has the fastest GDP growth and the fastest wage growth, not despite the fact that we're embracing clean energy, but because we are embracing clean energy. But we're not done yet. There's more to do. Now we need it to repose in the White House.

On working with Republicans on climate change

The sad fact is [that] at the moment ... we're going to have to find a way to get this done without them, because right now we still have not seen the spirit of Teddy Roosevelt. We're seeing the spirit of Mitch McConnell, who will kill any climate change bill in its cradle if he has a chance. And that means we have to get rid of the filibuster, we have to prevent Mitch McConnell from stopping climate change and we have to let majority vote — one person one vote — be the Democratic rule in the U.S. Senate.

On why he can defeat President Trump

(Editor's note: This answer was cut from the final broadcast of this interview for time.)

I'm the only candidate that's beat him 21 times. I've sued him 21 times and we're 21 and 0 — it's not a bad record to start from. It shows my understanding of both the value system and the Constitution and the law. And those are good foundations to stand on to defeat Donald Trump. And frankly I think I'm a good match for him, because he is a very pessimistic, fearful person and I project a view of confidence and optimism and the can-do spirit of America.

Look at clean energy ... climate change is a template through which to look at this. He doesn't think we're smart enough to revolutionize our economy. He is too pessimistic about the capabilities of the American people. I think of the American people still having what we did when we went to the moon and we just need a spark of inspiration ... and I think America is ready and willing and able to create a whole new clean energy economy if they have that spark and inspiration.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Prior to moving into the host position in the fall of 2012, Martin started as National Security Correspondent for NPR in May 2010. In that position she covered both defense and intelligence issues. She traveled regularly to Iraq and Afghanistan with the Secretary of Defense, reporting on the US wars and the effectiveness of the Pentagon's counterinsurgency strategy. Martin also reported extensively on the changing demographic of the US military – from the debate over whether to allow women to fight in combat units – to the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell. Her reporting on how the military is changing also took her to a US Air Force base in New Mexico where the military for a rare look at how the military trains drone pilots.
Rachel Martin
Rachel Martin is a host of Morning Edition, as well as NPR's morning news podcast Up First.