Levi Draheim says he is "totally shocked" Mr Trump does not believe climate change is real. (ABC News: Conor Duffy) |
US President Donald Trump is eight times his age and a
much more experienced litigator, but nine-year-old Levi Draheim is
looking forward to seeing the leader in court.
Levi lives near Melbourne Beach in central Florida and is part of a group of 21 young people suing the president over his climate policies."The reason that I care so much is that I basically grew up on the beach. It's like another mother, sort of, to me," Levi said.His local beach faces the Atlantic Ocean and the flat coastal terrain is one of the areas in the United States most vulnerable to a rise in sea level.
Levi and his family believe they are already seeing the effects of climate change in the local sand dunes, which are nesting territory for sea turtles.
"It makes me really sad seeing how much dune we've lost," Levi said.
"When I went out on the beach after the hurricane, I was just crying because there was so much dune lost."
'I was shocked Trump doesn't believe in climate change'
Leanne Draheim says her son Levi is passionate about the environment and spending time outside. (ABC News: Conor Duffy) |
"Exercising my 'reasoned judgement' I have no doubt that the right to a climate system capable of sustaining human life is fundamental to a free and ordered society," Federal Judge Ann Aiken wrote.
The 16yo suing the US Government |
Meet Xiuhtezcatl Martinez, aged 16 and one of the 21 plaintiffs suing the US Government over lack of action on climate change. |
"I was just totally shocked that he doesn't believe climate change is real," Levi said."It was a little bit scary. It was just a little bit disturbing he didn't believe that climate change was real."
The case has seen Levi and his fellow young climate activists face some rather adult language on social media, but his mother Leanne Draheim said she was not worried.
"Some people are saying like, 'Why are you letting your kid get involved? What does he know? He doesn't know enough to get involved'," Ms Draheim said.
"But really he knows that he cares about the environment, he cares about being outside, and we've talked about how that's not going to happen in the future for his kids if things keep going the way things are going."
Climate change spending slashed
President Trump has not yet said whether he will stick by his pledge to "cancel" the Paris Climate Accord, but he has moved swiftly to curtail government spending on climate.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) stands to lose almost a third of its funding under Mr Trump's draft budget, and climate programs in other agencies will not be funded.
"Regarding the question as to climate change, I think the president was fairly straightforward: 'We're not spending money on that anymore,'" Mr Trump's budget director Mick Mulvaney said.
Links
- This Young Girl's Lawsuit Highlights The Issue With Climate Change Inaction
- US states challenge Trump with climate lawsuit
- 'Biggest Case on the Planet' Pits Kids vs. Climate Change
- 21 kids aged 9 to 20 are suing the Trump administration for failing to prevent climate change
- The climate change lawsuit the Trump administration is desperate to stop going to trial
- The Teen-Agers Suing Over Climate Change
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