The Atlantic

The Global Rightward Shift on Climate Change

President Trump may be leading the rich, English-speaking world to scale back environmental policies.
Source: Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

Last Thursday, Malcolm Turnbull was the prime minister of Australia. By the end of this week, he’ll be just another guy in Sydney.

Turnbull was felled by climate-change policy. His attempt at a moderate, even milquetoast energy bill—which included some mild cuts in greenhouse-gas emissions—proved too aggressive for his co-partisans. On Friday, members of Australia’s center-right Liberal Party voted him out of office.

Pity for Turnbull, though at least he can he can trudge home to . And pity for Australia, which lately has had some trouble keeping its prime ministers in office. (It’s churned through six of them since 2007.) Yet even setting that context aside, Turnbull’s tumble remains a disquietingsign for anyone hoping for an aggressive global climate policy. In Australia—where global warming has contributed to the die-off of —even a mild climate bill could not pass under a conservative government.

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