National Geographic - Laura Parker | Craig Welch
The new president's first moves on science spur a Twitter war and prompt a march.
aerial photographs that clearly showed the crowd at former President Obama's 2009 inauguration was larger than the crowd at President Trump's.
Trump was so peeved, he personally ordered acting Park Service director
Michael Reynolds in a phone call to come up with additional photographs
that would prove the media "had lied in reporting the attendance had
been no better than average," the Washington Post reported. Reynolds sent more photos to the White House. But they did not show larger crowds.
So began an unprecedented rebellion inside government agencies that
quickly transformed from a duel about presidential popularity into the
fate of the government's work on climate change.
By the end of Week One, public affairs officials in agencies where
climate scientists work had received directives aimed at silencing
them—at least temporarily. The Environmental Protection Agency was
ordered, Reuters reported,
to take down its climate change page from its website—although that
order was shelved in the backlash that followed. Grants and contracts at
EPA were also frozen, although there are reports that that edict may
also be rescinded.
"Taken together, what we've seen over the first five days is completely unprecedented," says Peter Gleick,
a water scientist and co-founder of the Pacific Institute in Oakland,
California. "I have seen nothing like it in my lifetime and I've been
around for a while."
Climate Change 101 With Bill Nye
The Trump administration is hardly the first new executive branch to
attempt to influence scientific research that contradicts political
party orthodoxy. Under President George W. Bush, Interior Department
officials sometimes overruled agency scientists working on endangered
species issues. The Obama administration was accused by scientists of
underreporting damage from the 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico
and at times required public-relations chaperones when scientists talked
to the press.
But the speed and ferocity with which controls on science appeared in
the opening days of the Trump administration set off the fury on Twitter
and inspired scientists from Maine to California to join a scientists'
march on Washington.
More than a dozen "rogue" unofficial Twitter accounts launched to voice
resistance to the orders. Some claimed to be tweeting on behalf of
unidentified federal scientists at the Park Service, NASA, the U.S.
Forest Service, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Agriculture
and Health and Human Services Departments—although no one knows for
sure the identities of the people posting the tweets.
Scientists are not known for waging political protest en masse. But
they have become so alarmed by what has played out, they are taking a
page from the Women's March
in Washington that drew an estimated 470,000 protesters, with protests
in at least 80 other countries the day after Trump was sworn into
office.
"The situation seems more uncertain than ever," says Bethany Wiggin,
a University of Pennsylvania humanities professor who directs the Penn
Library Data Refuge and has been leading the effort to collect and
preserve federal climate and environmental data.
David Doniger,
director of climate and clean air program at the Natural Resources
Defense Council, says he's less concerned about the Twitter war than
efforts to expunge climate information from government websites.
"The most dramatic thing is the turn from full acceptance of climate
science to this calculated waffling from all the Cabinet nominees who
testified on the Hill," he says. "They are all saying, 'the climate is
changing, we just don't know whether it is human influence or how much.
That still amounts to climate denial."
Whether intended or not at the start-up of the Trump administration,
the question of how the president handles climate change has now become
an urgent question to settle. Doniger says the point isn't that EPA
contracts were frozen, it's what happens next: "What will be more
telling is how they change what's contracted for and what tasks the
agency is going to be allowed to do and not be allowed to do."
Below are three takeaways from the tumultuous first week:
Muzzling Agencies Inspires A Scientists' March On Washington
Doubters of science in general date back to Galileo. Climate scientists have been an outspoken voice for as long as the government has been studying climate science.
But instructions to limit communications to the public that were passed
on to public affairs officials at the EPA, Agriculture Department, and,
according to the Washington Post, the National Institutes of Health,
have fed fears that the Trump administration will attempt to filter
climate science through a political lens.
"Attacks on climate change are nothing new," Gleick says. "They have
always come from the fringe, peripheral groups and individuals. Now it
looks as though marginal groups have control of the steering wheel."
Meanwhile, the march, which began as a suggestion on Facebook, has blossomed into a full-force organisational effort, with a web page and activists working to set it up. A date will be announced possibly next week. The March for Science Twitter account has 288,000 followers.
"This has just developed in the last 48 to 72 hours. It's really snowballing," says Jacquelyn Gill,
one of the march organisers and a University of Maine paleoecologist
who studies how extinction affects biodiversity. "What prompted this is
the idea that climate science in particular will be targeted. It's not
about cost-cutting. The entire United States science and medical
research budget is less than two percent of the federal budget. This is
clearly agenda driven."
The Park Service is one of the least controversial and most popular
federal agencies because its primary task is to take care of the
nation's parks. But in the wake of the flap about the size of the
inauguration crowd, a former Park Service employee at the Badlands
National Park in North Dakota defied President Trump—setting off a
broader resistance that quickly spread to other federal agencies.
The Badlands former employee, who still had access to the Park
Service's official Twitter account, posted tweets about rising carbon
dioxide levels in the atmosphere. One of three posts said: "Today, the
amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is higher than at any time in
the last 650,000 years. #climate."
By the time those posts were deleted on January 24, the Badlands Twitter account had some 60,000 new followers.
Then, a new account was born—AltUSNatParkService—which used the Park
Service logo and identified itself as the "Unofficial #Resistance team
of U.S. National Park Service." As of Friday morning, it had 1.24
million followers.
There are now more than a dozen alt-agency Twitter accounts, all
posting a combination of climate science facts and taunts at Trump.
Although these rogue accounts claim to represent agency employees, it is
impossible to confirm who set the accounts up and is actively tweeting.
A Park Service employee who asked to remain anonymous for fear of being
fired told National Geographic that agency workers are concerned that
there will be reprisals from the administration, which has been
embarrassed by the public show of resistance to the commander in
chief—even though it is impossible to determine if the alt-sites are
operated by actual government employees or internet trolls. But, the
employee said, one tweet in particular posted on the alt-Park Service
account suggests the account may indeed be operated by at least one
rebellious Park Service employee because it refers to the White House by
its official name, President's Park, because the residence is part of
the national park system—a tidbit not widely known outside the Park
Service.
"Reports of an unidentified orange haired mammal close to President's Park," the tweet says. "Possibly invasive species. DC animal services have been notified." (Read about the new species of moth named after President Trump.)
A Glimmer Of Hope?
It's still early and missteps are not uncommon as new administrations
get up and running. The contract freeze at the EPA may, in the end, turn
out to be "a tempest in a teapot," Doniger says. Although signals so
far have put the scientific community on red alert, it may be too early
to reach any conclusion other than the administration's start-up is in
disarray.
Despite less-than-compelling testimony about climate change from both
Rex Tillerson and Scott Pruitt, Trump's picks to lead the State
Department and EPA, a glimmer of hope shone through that at least one of
the newcomers understands what's at stake. Billionaire banker Wilbur
Ross, the administration's nominee to head the Commerce Department,
outlined his views in a letter to U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, a Democrat whose home state of Florida is one of the most vulnerable places to sea-level rise on Earth.
While Ross, who lives part of the year in Palm Beach County, Florida,
echoed his fellow Cabinet colleagues in demurring on the cause of
climate change, he agreed to focus on addressing the impacts. "Science
should be left to the scientists," Ross said.
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