James Inhofe: climate change’s biggest enemy in the Senate, and the co-author of the letter to Trump to withdraw from the Paris climate accord. Photo: Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

By Tom McCarthy and Lauren Gambino
1 June 2017
(The Guardian) – A withdrawal by Donald Trump from the Paris climate accord would go down as a hallmark of his presidency. It would be unilateral, reckless and splashy – trademark Trump. The president [announced his decision to withdraw] at 3pm ET (8pm BST) on Thursday.But while Trump has often stood on a range of issues as a maverick outlier from mainstream Republican politics, on climate change he is at the centre of the party’s orthodoxy. Trump’s disbelief in climate change and decision on whether to support the Paris agreement reflects an area of unusual agreement between the president and elected Republicans, whose track record of climate change denialism is plain and long.Unmissable behind the elected Republicans stand other interests: the oil, gas, and coal industries, which together are some of the most influential donors to Republican candidates.The big-money supporters got a return on their investment last week, when 22 Republican senators whose campaigns have collected more than $10 million in oil, gas, and coal money since 2012 sent a letter to the president urging him to withdraw from the Paris deal.Trump had been said to be on the fence about the deal. Members of his inner circle, including his daughter, were reported to favor staying in.“We strongly encourage you to make a clean break from the Paris Agreement,” read the letter, drafted by Wyoming’s John Barrasso, chairman of the Senate committee on environment and public works, and Oklahoma’s Jim Inhofe, a longtime climate change denier and senior member of that committee.The letter argued that the Paris deal threatened Trump’s efforts to rescind the clean power plan, an Obama-era set of regulations and guidelines that include emissions caps and other rules deemed onerous by the fossil fuel industries. […]Donations from oil, gas, and coal interests to the signatories of the letter are Open Secrets that seemed ready for a new review. A Guardian survey of Federal Elections Commission data organized by the Center for Responsive Politics found that the industries gave a total of $10,694,284 to the 22 senators over the past three election cycles. [more]

The Republicans who urged Trump to pull out of Paris deal are big oil darlings