Trump at CPAC 2025: Attack Climate Policy and Double Down on Denial

Conservative conference featured global right-wing speakers from Liz Truss to JD Vance calling for an end to climate protections.
Black and white image of a man with bear and glasses, the left half of his face illuminated and the right half in shadow
Black and white image of a man with bear and glasses, the left half of his face illuminated and the right half in shadow
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Trump boasted about withdrawing from the โ€œone-sidedโ€ Paris Agreement, saying, โ€œIt was a disaster.โ€ย Credit: Zach D. Roberts

Just a month into President Donald Trumpโ€™s chaotic administration, American and international conservatives swooped into the 2025 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) outside Washington, D.C., in mid-February, and took a knee to the president, non-elected billionaire Elon Musk, and their fossil fuel deregulation agenda.ย 

After numerous speeches heralding the MAGA movement by major figures on the right, including Vice President JD Vance, DOGE chief Elon Musk, ex-Trump aide Steve Bannon, and Speaker of the House Republican Mike Johnson, on the last day of the four-day event, Trump himself spoke to the faithful. Basking in chants of โ€œUSA, USA,โ€ Trump boasted about withdrawing from the โ€œone-sidedโ€ Paris Agreement, saying, โ€œIt was a disaster, it was a disaster.โ€ย 

โ€œI terminated the Green New Scam,โ€ he went on, referring to the Green New Deal, which was never enacted or proposed as an actual bill. โ€œOne of the greatest hoaxes ever played on this country is the Green New Scam. We spent trillions of dollars on this nonsense โ€ฆ It really set back our country.โ€

In a rambling speech bereft of solid policy or facts, Trump also said he โ€œcanceled Joe Biden’s insane electric vehicle mandate, where everybody has to have an electric,โ€ again referring to non-existent legislation. Biden did not mandate people to switch to electric cars; he had progressively stricter pollution standards.ย 

Trumpโ€™s final reference to the environment in his speech was that โ€œpeople can buy any type of car they want, except for hydrogen. The only thing you can’t do is buy a hydrogen-powered car. You know why? They said it really works great, but when it doesn’t work, you never find a body. It’s a bet that’s a bad sign.โ€ As of this publication date, no one has been disintegrated by a hydrogen car explosion. He then ended with his signature dance as the Village Peopleโ€™s โ€œYMCAโ€ blared over the loudspeakers.

Trump dances to the song, “YMCA” at CPAC 2025. Credit: Zach D. Roberts

Trumpโ€™s references to fake climate policy was emblematic of this yearโ€™s CPAC discussions on the environment. In past years, the conferenceโ€™s environmental speakers were more โ€œscientific,โ€ with conservative climate denialists showing graphs and data to prove their theories that climate change seemingly does not exist. But with no breakout sessions this year, the gathering was all anti-climate talk and pro-MAGA with zero attempts at science. 

Take former UK Prime Minister Liz Trussโ€™s talk on Thursday, Feb. 20, the second day of CPAC. Truss, who had previously served as the UKโ€™s environment secretary, expressed her anger that her move to end the ban on fracking in Great Britain was brought back in 2022 by her predecessor, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. 

Truss was famously only in office for 45 days. โ€œSadly, I wasn’t in office long enough to actually make [the fracking ban] happen,โ€ she told the conference crowd.

โ€œWe have net-zero policies that have decimated our oil and gas industry,โ€ she said. โ€œThe net result is we have the highest energy prices in the developed world. And in Britain, we’ve just seen the last steel plant close down last year. We cannot produce our own steel anymore.โ€

Former UK Prime Minister Liz Truss echoed Trump’s disdain for big government. Credit: Zach D. Roberts

The former Prime Minister, who spent much of her adult life in government, then repeated Trumpโ€™s disdain for the โ€œdeep state,โ€ saying, โ€œWe want to dismantle the British deep state, which is older and more entrenched than the American one.โ€ย 

โ€œWe need a great restoration bill to repeal all of the terrible laws, from the Equality Act to the Climate Change Act, the Human Rights Act to the Constitutional Reform Act,โ€ she said. โ€œWe need to eradicate judicial activism in Britain and restore parliamentary sovereignty.โ€

CPAC has expanded its international influence and speakers over the last few years with annual South Korea and Hungary meetings. Leader of the Reform UK party Nigel Farage, who also attended, has spoken at the conference for many years, and is considered a bit of a celebrity here.

Wright Vows to Axe Regulations

On the first day of the conference, U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wrightโ€™s speech pushed Trumpโ€™s โ€œdrill baby drill and build baby buildโ€ philosophy. The former fracking CEO of Liberty Energy promised that his and Trumpโ€™s other cabinet departments would be โ€œworking feverishlyโ€ to remove regulations to pave the way for higher energy production. He also emphasized removing restrictions the Biden Administration put on fossil fuel appliances like gas stoves.ย 

Last year, gas stoves were the new โ€œplastic strawsโ€ in the world of right-wing media as conservative news outlets claimed the Democratic administration was looking to ban them fully, which it was not.

U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright talked about the amount of energy needed for AI data centers. Credit: Zach D. Roberts

Economic competition with China has been a running theme through many of the speeches at CPAC for years. But now, with the massively successful launch of DeepSeek, finding energy for artificial intelligence operations is a priority. Wrightโ€™s speech emphasized the energy use that AI technology will demand and claimed that it will lead to โ€œenormous benefitsโ€ in drug discovery and national security. โ€œWe want China to lead the way in AI? I would feel naked if their AI was better than ours,โ€ he said.

AI and tech companies donated huge amounts to the Trump campaign, to the tune of tens of millions of dollars. That investment has paid off as the closure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Trumpโ€™s changes at the FTC and FCC to reign in their powers will benefit the tech world immensely. Trump has even rescinded Bidenโ€™s executive order warning people about AI.  

Dunleavyโ€™s Political Ambitions

One of Trumpโ€™s first executive orders demanded the nation โ€œunleash Alaskaโ€™s extraordinary resource potential.โ€ Environmental rights organization, EarthJustice replied, โ€œWhile the Trump administrationโ€™s plans were made clear in the orders, itโ€™s important to note that the vast bulk of the actions cannot be made unilaterally by the President without cooperation from government agencies, Congress, or other authorities.โ€

Running throughout CPAC on the big screens in the main ballroom amounted to campaign ads for Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, who wants to leave his job in the 49th state. Called the โ€œworst-kept-secret,โ€ Dunleavy had been auditioning for a gig in the Trump administration, but now that that doesnโ€™t seem to be happening, heโ€™s likely looking at running for Senator against one of his fellow Republicans, Dan Sullivan, who is up for reelection in 2026, or Lisa Murkowski, who is up in 2028. The ad, which features Trump prominently, has the President speaking about how he will work with Dunleavy to provide โ€œenergy to Alaska and allies around the world.โ€ย 

A campaign ad screened at CPAC for Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s Senate campaign. Credit: Zach D. Roberts

From the CPAC stage, Gov. Dunleavy told the audience that Trump โ€œsees us [Alaska] as a solution to many of America’s problems.โ€ A $44 billion liquified natural gas pipeline project that both Trump and Dunleavy are pushing is oddly not planned to send energy to the lower 48, but to Asian customers. Japan has been trying to curry favor with Trump for access since that could help the nation diversify supplies away from riskier sources like Russia.

Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum 

President Trump has commanded the new Secretary of the Interior, Doug Burgum, to find new ways to exploit public lands. The goal, Burgum explained in his CPAC speech, is to โ€œsell to our friends and allies.โ€ He claims that doing so will โ€œend our trade deficitsโ€ and โ€œthe wars abroad.โ€ Ultimately, Burgum claims this work will set up President Trump to โ€œwin the Nobel Prize.โ€

Burgam, a billionaire former two-term governor of North Dakota and a software developer, has extensive ties to the oil and gas industry, including hundreds of thousands in investments. After a brief run for President in 2024, Burgam endorsed Trump.  

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum aims to exploit public lands to “sell to our friends and allies.” Credit: Zach D. Roberts

Burgam will also chair the newly founded National Energy Dominance Council with Energy Secretary Chris Wright as vice chair. The council โ€œwill advise President Trump on strategies to achieve energy dominance by improving the processes for permitting, production, generation, distribution, regulation, and transportation across all forms of American energy.โ€ It will also cut โ€œred tapeโ€ through axing regulations. 

CFACT Was the Lone Climate Group in Hall

Down in the exhibit hall, the tables that many years ago mainly saw small government groups were filled with culture warriors โ€“ groups opposed to abortion, trans rights, and other historically underrepresented communities. This year, the lone group in the hall focusing on climate was CFACT, Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, a โ€œconservative libertarian think tank.โ€ย 

Nate Meyers, CFACTโ€™s national field coordinator was clear on the groupโ€™s approach to  the โ€œscienceโ€ of climate change โ€“โ€œItโ€™s not settled at all,โ€ he said. Meyers verbally added, โ€œโ„ขโ€[trade mark]] as he said the words โ€œclimate changeโ€ when speaking to DeSmog. 

CFACT’s Nate Myers speaks with DeSmog. Credit: Zach D. Roberts

Collegians for a Constructive Tomorrow is CFACTโ€™s college campus organization, which, according to Myers, has 32 campus groups. Like Charlie Kirkโ€™s Turning Point USA, CFACT aims to capture the minds of young people, according to Myers., โ€œCollege campuses are so totally captured by the left. Statistically, you’re more likely to be instructed by a Marxist than you are a Republican,โ€ he said.

โ€œThat demonstrates a huge need for alternative viewpoints on college campuses,โ€ he added. โ€œAnd it’s kind of a cliche thing to say, butย the children and young people are our future.โ€

When asked who funds CFACT, Myers mentioned small donations and occasional larger direct donations, emphasizing the grassroots nature of the organization. When DeSmogasked if they received backing from Koch Inc., like many similar climate-denying groups, Myers demurred, saying he wasnโ€™t a fan of Koch.) In the past, CFACT has received large sums from Kochโ€™s Donors Trust, along with all the other usual suspects of right-wing climate denying donors.ย ย 

Black and white image of a man with bear and glasses, the left half of his face illuminated and the right half in shadow
Zach D. Roberts is a photojournalist covering the far right in America and is a Puffin Foundation artist.

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