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15 Green Politicians


26 Jun 2007
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From mayors to heads of state, politicians the world over are going green. Check out our list of top achievers, then tell us which political leaders you'd nominate in the comments section at the bottom of the page.

1
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Photo: Thomas Hawk via Flickr
Arnold Schwarzenegger
The Governator has truly pumped up environmental action in California. He made the state a global leader on climate change by signing into law the landmark Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, which commits the state to cut its greenhouse-gas emissions 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050. He's also done some heavy lifting to clean up new cars and trucks sold in the state, instituted a program to track levels of chemicals in Californians' bodies, and, with other West Coast governors, pledged to protect the health of the Pacific Ocean. It's enough to make us forget Junior -- almost.
 
2
Wangari Maathai
Wangari Maathai
Maathai plants seeds both literally and figuratively as the founder of the Green Belt Movement, which promotes peace and good governance through environmental protection and has inspired Kenyans to plant 30 million trees since it began in 1977. A member of the Kenyan Parliament and one-time presidential candidate, she is best known as winner of the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize for "her contribution to sustainable development, democracy, and peace."
 
3
Ken Livingstone
Ken Livingstone
The left-wing London mayor known as "Red Ken" has a new color in his palette. Aiming to make his city the greenest in the world, he's levied a tax on vehicles entering the city center during normal weekday work hours, cracking down especially hard on SUV drivers. Under his Climate Change Action Plan, London will get 25 percent of its power from more-efficient, local sources and reduce carbon emissions 60 percent within 20 years; in addition, he's pledged about $90 million in the 2008 budget for programs to fight climate change. And that's just the wonky stuff -- Livingstone has also announced plans for a housing development in East London that will produce no carbon emissions.
 
4
Helen Clark
Helen Clark
Clark, the prime minister of New Zealand, has pledged to make Kiwiland the first carbon-neutral country by reducing emissions and offsetting the rest. New Zealand has started working toward that goal by increasing biofuel production and neutralizing the emissions of six government departments. The race is on!
 
5
Marina Silva
Marina Silva
Born to a family of rubber tappers in the Brazilian Amazon, Marina Silva went on to graduate from university, found the independent trade-union movement, and gain election to Brazil's federal senate. In 1996, she won the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize for her activism on behalf of the rainforest and the rubber tappers who make a sustainable living from it. Today, she is Brazil's environment minister and an avid protector of the Amazon. Due in part to her efforts, deforestation of the Brazilian rainforest has decreased by nearly 50 percent in the past two years.
 
6
David Cameron
David Cameron
British Conservative Party leader Cameron is challenging the green cred of the more-traditionally environmental Labor Party with his ambitious policy recommendations, which include binding annual targets for cutting carbon emissions, energy decentralization, and "frequent flyer" taxes aimed at restricting aviation. His personal life is nothing to sneeze at either: He rides his bicycle to the House of Commons and grows organic carrots in his garden.
 
7
Peter Garrett
Peter Garrett
Garrett, former frontman for outspoken Australian rock band Midnight Oil, still rocks -- and is still outspoken -- as a member of the Aussie House of Representatives and shadow minister for climate change, environment, heritage, and the arts. His previous gigs will also strike a chord with greens: he spent 10 years as president of the Australian Conservation Foundation and two years on the international board of Greenpeace, and was a founding member of the Surfrider Foundation, an ocean-advocacy group.
8
Greg Nickels
Greg Nickels
As mayor of Seattle, Nickels initiated the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement, a group of 496 municipal leaders (so far) who have pledged their cities to meet the Kyoto Protocol target of a 7 percent reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions from 1990 levels by 2012. Participating mayors, who together represent more than 64 million Americans, also urge climate action on the national level. Nickels' local goals include increasing the number of trees in the Emerald City and improving bike and public-transportation options.
 
9
Margot Wallström
Margot Wallström
As environment minister of the European Union from 1999 to 2004, Wallström aggressively sought to boost standards for chemical safety, improve air and water quality, and create detailed action plans on climate change, biodiversity, and resource preservation. She was a leader in convincing every last E.U. member to ratify the Kyoto Protocol in 2002, and an outspoken critic of the U.S.'s failure to ratify. Now, as a vice president of the European Commission, she has been active in creating sustainability reporting guidelines and figuring out how to market Europe's high environmental standards to the rest of the world. Plus, she blogs!
 
10
Stephane-Dion
Stephane Dion
Canada's other Dion, the recently elected leader of the Liberal Party, has pledged to unite the quest for a better environment, social justice, and economic growth into a holistic vision of sustainability. Called by one blogger "the environmental candidate for the non-environmentalist," Dion will be in the running to become prime minister of Canada when the nation holds its next election, expected sometime this year. He has proposed tax credits for energy efficiency and pledged to make a concerted effort to meet Kyoto Protocol goals; in fact, he loves Kyoto so much, he named his dog after it. No, really!
 
11
Angela Merkel
Angela Merkel
German chancellor, former environment minister, and current leader of the G8, Merkel is an outspoken advocate for action against climate change. She was a driving force behind a recent E.U. green-energy pact, which established a union-wide goal of using 20 percent renewable energy and cutting carbon emissions 20 percent by 2020, and she pushed with all her might to get George W. Bush to say the U.S. would "consider seriously" a goal of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions 50 percent by 2050. She also acts on her principles by using compact fluorescent light bulbs in her home (though her comment that they're "not quite bright enough" might not have helped the cause).
 
12
Barbara Boxer
Barbara Boxer
The chair of the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee has called climate change "the greatest challenge of our generation" and is a cosponsor of one of the strongest climate bills in Congress. The California Democrat has long been an environmental champion in the Senate, coming out swinging to prevent drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, coauthoring a 2001 law to help clean up and redevelop contaminated industrial land, and leading the charge against toxic gasoline additive MTBE.
 
13
Xie Zhenhua
Xie Zhenhua
Xie, the Chinese vice minister of state development and reform and the former environment minister, has been a key player in pushing to make China greener. He has promoted environmental protection as a national policy and sustainable practices for China's rapidly expanding economy. His work was honored with the United Nations' Sasakawa Environment Prize in 2003, a monetary award that Xie invested in environmental education in some of the country's poorest areas.
 
 
14
Stavros Dimas
Stavros Dimas
As the European commissioner for the environment, Greece's Dimas has forged plans to cut airline emissions and push new clean-air rules. He also presided over the adoption of REACH, the European Union's groundbreaking chemical regulation system, and he doesn't shy away from criticizing the United States for obstructing action against climate change. Other political leaders have pressed him to stem the steady flow of environmental legislation, but Dimas pushes on.
 
15
Rocky Anderson
Rocky Anderson
A green mayor in a "red" state, Salt Lake City's Rocky Anderson has remade his municipality during two terms in office. Anderson outlined a plan to lower the city government's carbon dioxide emissions 21 percent between 2001 and 2012, and met those targets six years ahead of schedule. Salt Lake now has an improved public transit system, including light rail, and requires that new and renovated city-owned or -managed buildings be certified under the U.S. Green Building Council's LEED program.
 

Runners-up


Elliot Spitzer
Eliot Spitzer
Since taking office as New York's governor in January, Spitzer got right to work greening the place up. He's started with a complete retrofitting of the 39-room governor's mansion, overhauling everything from the light bulbs to the lawn mowers, and has his sights set on more state buildings for the next round of greening. Prior to his election, he spent eight years crusading for environmental protection as New York's attorney general, suing the Bush administration numerous times over failure to regulate greenhouse-gas emissions, mercury pollution from power plants, pesticide use in public housing, and efficiency standards for appliances.


Bob Brown
Bob Brown
This Australian senator is the leader and co-founder of the Aussie Green Party and has long been a rabble-rouser down under for environmental issues and human rights. In 1983, he was arrested while protesting a dam, spent 19 days in jail, and was elected to the Tasmanian Parliament on the day of his release. More recently, he is involved in a lawsuit against Gunns Limited, an Australian forest-products company seeking to build a pulp mill in Tasmania.


Michael Bloomberg
Michael Bloomberg
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg unveiled a comprehensive, 25-year sustainability plan on Earth Day this year, aiming, among other things, to reduce the city's greenhouse-gas emissions 30 percent by the year 2030. His numerous green initiatives include switching the city's taxi fleet to hybrids and supporting installation of the world's first free-flow tidal-power turbines off Roosevelt Island. Will the Big Apple soon be known as the Green Apple?


Henry Waxman
Henry Waxman
This California representative is championing the toughest climate bill in the U.S. House: the Safe Climate Act, introduced in mid-March, which calls for an emissions freeze at 2009 levels and gradual reductions through 2050 to bring the U.S. to 80 percent below 1990 levels. Waxman's been a consistent leader on environmental issues, fighting for pesticide regulations, the Clean Air Act, the Lead Contamination Control Act, and communities' rights to know about pollution levels.


Tell us which green leaders you'd vote for in comments below.

Kate Sheppard contributed to this list.

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Peņalosa

Enrique Peñalosa, the former Mayor of Bogotá, is a huge miss on your part.  He transformed a city with a new mass transit system, the world's largest car-free day, the world's longest pedestrian corridor (19 km), and over 200 km of cycleways.  Many on your list are big names who have made green-related statements but have done virtually nothing in terms of actual implementation.  Perhaps you should consider a new list...the "greenwash 15".

Elizabeth May

I think that the Elizabeth May, ex president of the Sierra Club of Canada and now Leader of the Green Party of Canada should be included on your list and certainly higher than Stephane Dion who's credibility is suspect as a supporter of past governments who achieved nothing on climate change.


Schwarzenegger

The California League of Conservation Voters gave him a grade of 50% for 2006 and 58% for 2005.  See here.

http://www.ecovote.org/scorecards/2006/

That's actually quite good for a Republican, but not nearly enough to merit being in the top 15 green politicians. The global warming bills he's signed definitely have been progressive (he did have a role in shaping the legislation, but perhaps more credit should go to the legislature).  The publicity he's given the climate movement has been phenomenal, and he's been blunt in criticizing the Bush administration's criminal climate negligence.  However, his overall environmental record is not that good.

I would suggest Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator, for the list.  He has a great voting record, and introduced the Global Warming Pollution Reduction Act along with Barbara Boxer.  I saw him speak in Hanover, NH for the Step It Up rally, and was really impressed.

Elizabeth May

Elizabeth May is not an elected politician.  This list is obviously about elected political leaders, ministers, govenors, mayors etc.  There are thousands of people who have dedicaed their lives to environmental causes.  That's not what this list is about.

Green Politicians

how come Fidel Castro is not on this list? for my humble understanding, Cuba is nowadays one of the "greenest" countries in the world, with many environmental and social programs that the "over-developed countries" could follow.
Just a thought !  

helen clark

um..!..with helen clark..you must contrast the realities with the rhetoric..

under her leadership our emmissions/forest clearing/waterways pollution stats have gone through the roof..

her government have also been wholesale 'dairy-pimps'..

actively encouraging the conversion of farms to dairy units..(thus ensuring much higher pollution/farm 'run-off' problems..)

and don't get me started on our ongoing record on animal welfare..

and perhaps as a clincher for you..

after the last election..after campaigning for the green party as favoured coalition partner..

clark instead plumped to coalesce with the two most reactionary/climate-change denial parties in new zealand..

in fact your nomination of clark has many here in new zealand..both laughing and crying at the same time..

(part of the laughter is for your use of what is generally considered here a photographic abberation..her 'glam/soft-porn' shot..

where the physical realities of helen clark are as different to this picture..

as her greenwash/spin is to the realities of this 'green leader'

and if helen clark is one of the top 15 green political leaders..

than we are in more trouble than i thought..

vegankiwiguy..

vegankiwiguy

how could you forget Kucinich?

He's 100% enviro and animal-friendly. The others aren't even vegetarian and it's a fact that factory farming, welfare ranching, etc is the most destructive and far-reaching practice on earth.

15 Green Politicians

Perhaps there should be more specific criterica for who belongs on this list: were they ELECTED?  What time period are we looking at?  

The first name that came to mind was Dennis Kucinich.  He has been a Green politician for a long time.  Next would be whoever created the Green Chicago initiative.  And what about Ralph Nader?
We need a Nobel Prize for Environmental Leadership.

John W Irwin

Bill T-3


Remember when Arnold ripped the the hydrogen fuel cell out of his abdomen and threw it out of the car window and it exploded?

That was in T-3, from 2003.   Arnold is like so ahead of the times.  

Texeme.Construct(Participant)

Al Gore

No he is not currently IN office, but.......

Why no mention of Al Gore?   Back in 1990 he wrote the Foreword to "Climate in Crisis: The Greenhouse Effect and What we can do" by Albert K Bates.  He has been concerned about Global Warming for a long time.

And, no doubt he is making a huge difference.


John W Irwin

Short Sighted

Congradulations for the humongous number of non english speaking/ non white politicians. It seems like global warming is the new whiteman burden.

at least you managed to sneak in 2.

Stephane Dion Green politican?

When they are the opposition, the Liberals, now lead by Stephane Dion talk a great line, but when they're government, their great lines become hook and sinker.  And that's how Grist has been taken in by Liberal Party rhetoric--taken in hook, line, and sinker.  For example, when he was environment minister in Feb, 2005, just days before the Kyoto protocol was to come into force, Dion refused to announce new fuel efficiencies guidelines for cars and trucks or commit to them.  He may have named his dog Kyoto, but that's about all he's done.
Another item: "The federal government is chronically unable to sustain initiatives once they are launched." -- 2005 Report of the [Canadian] Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development, Sept. 29 2005 (when Dion had been environment minister for almost 15 months.)

You should have listed Jack Layton, leader of the New Democratic Party who's widely recognized as the most environmentally conscious party leader in Canadian Federal politics, even by Greenpeace and the Canadian Sierra Club.

Bill Richardson

As governor of a Western state has implemented large number of programs designed to make our state a green oasis in the desert.

He is an elected politician, with a proven track record on implemented environmental policies designed to get us more quickly to a renewable energy status.

This is not an easy task, and much remains to be accomplished.  Many politicians and social movers are like Bush.  They come in late to say some buzz words that are just cover for destruction. However,  as ever, the best is often the greatest enemy of the better.  Can't do everything? Then do nothing and sit back and criticize, even excoriate those who accomplish much.  

Bill Richardson is the real deal and deserves recognition for his work toward energy independence, peace, and financial stability for our state and nation.  

Tony Blair

Although just resigned as UK Prime Minister, Blair was amongst the first to grasp the importance of sustainable development and climate change before many other European and world leaders. Although he failed to convince Bush at the G8 Gleneagles Agreement and during the second Earth Sunmmit in Johannesburg, he strongly influenced people such as Shwarzenegger and many African leaders about the importance of sustainable development (sd) and climate change. He put sd and climate change policies into the heart of government, directing policies, plans and issuing targets. He beefed up the independent Sustainable Development Commission which acts as an effective outside watchdog on government achievements. His government policies covered everything from alternative fuels used in the official car pool, using the national waste strategy to tackle climate change to procurement policies. A big driver of windfarms, he has left the options open for the UK to build more nuclear power stations as a means to tackling climate change. Still you can't have everything

Helen Clark

It's great to see Helen Clark getting the recognition she deserves - and vegankiwi, your comments are risible.  Do you really think any New Zealand Prime Minister has done more to protect the environment in this country? The first thing Labour did in government was to stop native logging on the West Coast, literally hours after receiving warrants from the Governor General.

The carbon neutrality goal has raised the profile of environmental issues hugely. Emissions trading won't be far away, the public sector is already starting to reduce its emissions, Labour is supporting waste minimisation legislation, homes are being insulated all over the country, rail is going
to be electrified in Auckland, public transport spending is up hugely, regional fuel taxes are coming in, urban design work is picking up etc...

This is, of course, not to mention the work Helen did to get climate change on the APEC agenda last year, focusing the attention of some of the biggest developing economies in the world.

I for one think that she has done (and is doing) a fantastic job when it comes to environmental issues both in New Zealand and, to the extent it is possible for her, in the world.


Where was the peoples choice?

Where was Caroline Lucas? The Green Party Euro-MP Caroline Lucas beat both Gordon Brown and David Cameron to be named 'politician of the year' in the 2nd Observer Ethical Awards. The MEP, who serves on the Parliament's Environment, International Trade and Climate Change committees, was chosen ahead of the other two shortlisted politicians by readers of the Observer.

She said: "People are increasingly disillusioned with the three main parties and are looking for a progressive alternative which genuinely has social and environmental justice at its heart. While the other parties might be beginning to wake up, to the issue of climate change only the Greens have both the radical policies needed and the political commitment to deliver them. Cameron and Brown may talk green - but its only the Green Party that's doing green, as an increasing number of people up and down the country are realising."

Consume less. Share more. Enjoy life.

Jamie Lerner

Although he is no longer elected, I believe it's important to mention Jamie Lerner in this list.  He was mayor of Curitiba, Brazil, for 3 terms (1971-75, 1979-84 and 1989-92), and governor from 1994-2002.

He implemented numerous sustainable actions at a large scale including: an incredible mass transit system which is used by 85% of citizens and an urban development pattern that whole heartedly supports it, the purchase of floodplain land for use as parks (54m2 of green space per citizen), and a municipal waste removal system exchanging food for waste in the barrios of the city.  Curitiba has been used as an urban planning and "ecocity" example worldwide.  

The handful of initiatives mentioned above go beyond simply being green policy, to being actions that are sustainable environmentally, socially and economically.  

Helen Clark is a disgrace

Helen Clark a green politician....yeah right!

The credibility of this list is seriously undermined by the inclusion of Helen Clark.  I don't normally agree with PhilU but he is absolutely right.  Clark pays lip service to the environment and uses it only as a justification to increase her governments already obscene tax rate, with no concern for environmental outcome.

After 8 years in power New Zealand's carbon foot print has soared and her government has committed to  "carbon neutrality.....at some stage yet to be defined".  This is a total cop out.  The complete disdain with which they treat the Green party in New Zealand more accurately reveals her Govts true attitude towards the environment.

Ask Russell Norman or Jeanette Fitzsimmons how green Helen Clark is....they'll tell you.

The irony in New Zealand is that the conservative party, National, actually has greener policies than the socialist Labour party she leads.  National aren't perfect by any stretch, but they have a quantifiable goal...50% emissions cut by 2050.  That's policy.  

Carbon neutrality....by when Helen?

Her inclusion in this list is a disgrace to the other leaders who are making meaningful contributions to environmental efforts worldwide.

The mileage her Labour party are trying to get in he press from her inclusion in this list is as pathetic as it is dishonest.

Not exactly a household name, but...

I would like to put in a good word for Representative Raul Grijalva, Democrat from Arizona.  He has recently introduced legislation that would undo the Homeland Security Department's waiver, and require that any border security measures, (including the building of fences), be modified to prevent harm being done to wilderness areas and wildlife.  I urge you to contact your own Representatives and ask them to join Mr. Grijalva.  I have already done so. Thank you.

Let the jaguars return!
Greg Nickels

Living in Seattle with Mayor Greg Nickels, I know that his "rep" is that he is a member of the environmental vanguard. And he does deserve credit for his global warming goals and efforts at corralling other mayors to move since the U.S. government is doing so little. BUT -- and this is a big but -- this mayor completely torpedoed a citizen's effort at getting a monorail mass transit system financed and built in the city and tried to shove a $6 billion tunnel for car travel down our throats when the city just plain did not want it. In this area, the citizens are actually ahead of the leaders in this city and state and Greg Nickels knows that all he has to do is move his lips and it will go a long way. He also gives developers like Paul Allen pretty much what they want. As a result, the last election against token opposition he only got about 55% support. It's about time that the word of all of this catches up with his global warming reputation.

Enviromental Leaders

It seems that all of these people deserve great credit for promoting actions to protect the environment.  Although a difficult choice, I would pick Barbara Boxer and Henry Waxman as co-first place winners with Xie Zhenhua in second place.  As a leader of the environmental movement in China, Xie Zhenhua surely faces more challenging obstacles than leaders in many other parts of the world.  

Marylou Noble


Marylou Noble

David Cameron / Ken Livingstone

I completely agree with Ken Livingstone being on this list, he has made dramatic changes with huge impact.  
However, please tell me the inclusion of David Cameron is a joke?  Yes, he may cycle the short distance to work at the House of Commons - but his driver follows behind him in his car with his belongings!  

Arnold overrated

Not to take away from what Arnold is doing, basking in the glory of signing legislation crafted by the Democrats, but his leadership is still mixed. He has a certain Bush like quality of making profound gestures in his speeches, but then appointing folks who are less than helpful to carry out his policies, or underfunding them.
I am glad for his conversion, because his initial policies were not very green despite RFK Jr.'s endorsement of him.
That said, he is taking public positions now that are moving him and the need to take action for the environment into the limelight. So, I guess he is finally using his celebrity to do some good for California (long overdue) and the planet.

Dion supports seal slaughter

I also question whether Stephane Dion should be on this list. He supports Canada's commercial harp and hooded seal slaughter, even though climate change is having a huge impact on their populations and hunters couldn't even reach their quota of 270,000 seals this year because pups were so scarce due to the vanishing ice.

For more on this topic, and the environmental implications of the commercial seal hunt in Canada, visit:

Harp seal populations in the northwestern Atlantic: modelling populations with uncertainty-a 2006 report by Dr. Stephen Harris, Carl D. Soulsbury & Graziella Iossa, School of Biological Science, University of Bristol, UK
http://www.hsicanada.ca/pdfs/Harp-seal-populations-in-the ...

The Canadian Seal Hunt: No Management and No Plan
http://www.greenpeace.ca/e/feature/seals/seals_report_030 ...

Elizabeth May

Elizabeth May most certainly IS a politician.  She left her Sierra Club work to devote her time to Green Party Canada.

on behalf of "Dick"

I'd like to start the bidding on Marina Silva's head at $10,000,000.  Bob Brown is worth another $5,000,000.  We've got to get rid of these people before they destroy everything that phony capitalism has worked so hard to build up.

Shu pas a vende.
I agree with Arob...

I also was in Quaintover, New Quaintshire for the Step it Up day where Bernie spoke.  He should definitely be higher on the list than Arnold.  I think that if you're going to recognize great people like Arnold, you should also recognize the contributions of very green-minded communities like Quaintstock, Quaintmont, where half of the homes are second homes.  Or Quiantover, New Quainshire.  Or Quyme, New Quaintshire.  Eventually we need to recognize that economic inequality and environmental issues are closely tied.  Second homes are bad for the environment.  And so are third homes.

Shu pas a vende.
Arnie Supports Highways not Transit and Rail

Arnie cut funds for public transit and has been really reluctant to support high-speed rail. He would rather see highways receive funding than  high-speed rail. Not very green if you ask me.

Ken Livingston would have been a better choice for the top.

More on Arnold's failings

The #1 green politician should not be someone who wants to build two stupid new destructive boondoggle dams.  

Do you live there now?

I grew up there and even then there was a lot of hydro. And my understanding is that they have ((link:70% renewable)) now with geothermal and hydro power, and hope to go to 90% by 2025.

We are lucky to get 7% so 70% is quite an achievement

John McCain already vetoes every eco bill

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