What's in a Number?: Media and Government Downplay Keystone XL Climate Rally Attendance

authordefault
on

A Sunday report from the Globe and Mail gives a rather undersized account of what prominent environmental organizations are calling the largest climate rally in American history, suggesting Canadian media might be trying to downplay the extent of public opposition to the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline planned to cut across the U.S. to reach refineries and exportย markets.

In the wake of the massively successful display of North American opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline in Washington DC on Sunday, February 17th, perhaps some Canadians are refusing to receive the message, or admit the significance of Canada’s contentious, bituminous role in the wholeย ordeal.

Organizers for the event estimate 35,000 or more individuals attended Sunday’s event, with some accounts citing figures as high as 50,000.

But as Paul Koring and his co-authors present the rally in the Globe and Mail, organizers onlyย claimed 35,000 participants attended the protest, but โ€œturnout seemed significantlyย smaller.โ€

Some protesters even โ€œvoiced disappointment at the numbersโ€ after traveling across the country to be in Washington for the monumental day. An unofficial policeman’s estimate, the article states, said the turnout amounted to perhaps 10,000, a meagre total evidenced by the unused portable toilets and protesters who skipped out early to leave nothing but a โ€œstraggling columnโ€ to march on the White House a mere two hours into theย rally.

Sounds rather unimpressive. I suppose Canadians can rest easy, knowing rumours of growing tar sands opposition south of the boarder are exaggerated.ย Right?

An anticipatory article by Koring in the Globe had already set the tone on Friday with misgivings about organizer ambitions to deliver โ€œtens of thousandsโ€ of โ€œpeople to decry efforts to build a pipeline.โ€ And in a follow-up article Koring claimed โ€œthe raucous Keystone XL pipeline argument is drowning out serious discussions about bigger, broader and far more importantย choices.โ€

Sunday’s article, co-authored by Koring, Barrie McKenna and Carrie Tait, runs with the headline โ€œU.S. Protest Paints Keystone as Emissions Villain.โ€ The overarching message is this: the opposition may have drawn their line in the sand, but it’s the wrong line. Protesters who โ€œvilified Keystoneโ€ on Sunday, need a reality check: the pipeline itself isn’t the issue – climate change is the rallyingย cry.

Exactly.

What Koring and other commentators have failed to grasp is the intentionallyย principled nature of the protest. The Keystone XL protest isn’t just about the pipeline itself – which Koring meaninglessly states โ€œwould produce virtually no emissionsโ€ – it’s about the fossil fuel empire; it’s about the tar sands; it’s about manmade climateย disruption.

The event itself was called โ€œForward on Climate.โ€ย 

And given the pipeline’s direct link to Canada’s climate quagmire, the Alberta tar sands, it isn’t at all surprising that Americans have seized the Keystone question as an opportunity to call out Canadian shortcomings. And it also isn’t surprising that some might try to dismiss the importance of thatย altogether.ย 

Gary Doer, Canada’s ambassador to the U.S., also downplayed the rally, claiming the protesters lack โ€œlogic.โ€ Speaking on Energy Week TV Doer referred to a number of high-profile arrests in the leadup to Sunday’s rally, including that of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and actress Daryl Hannah, saying โ€œtwenty people protesting do get more attention in the media than the 65 percent of Americans that prefer to get their oil from Canada rather than Venezuela or the Middle East,โ€ an argument seeming to emerge from out of the Canadian ‘Ethical Oil‘ย playbook.ย 

โ€œSo am I concerned with the fact that the media will go with the picture as opposed to sometimes logic? That’s just part of how issues are covered. But when you look at it, public opinion supportsย [Keystone].โ€

Doer might be somewhat behind the times, however. As the recent post-State of the Union poll demonstrated, the majority – 65 percent – of Americans feel climate change is a serious problem and support President Obama’s use of authority to curb carbon pollution. Keystone XL presents Obama with the opportunity to do just that, whether or not Canadians are on board, and whether or not Canadians keep apprised of American popularย sentiment.

Doer suggests the Obama administration ignoreย โ€œthe 20 people who are out thereโ€ and choose instead to โ€œproceed withย logic.โ€

But whoseย logic would thatย be?

Image Credit: JennaPope.com

Related Posts

Analysis
on

Badenoch, a self-described โ€˜net zero skeptic,โ€™ called Poilievre โ€˜a new friend and allyโ€™ in December.

Badenoch, a self-described โ€˜net zero skeptic,โ€™ called Poilievre โ€˜a new friend and allyโ€™ in December.
on

Claire Coutinho endorsed several figures linked to the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a group that questions established climate science.

Claire Coutinho endorsed several figures linked to the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a group that questions established climate science.
on

Oil company was storing a fraction of advertised amount of CO2 at offshore project, data shows.

Oil company was storing a fraction of advertised amount of CO2 at offshore project, data shows.
Analysis
on

What the country craves is fewer selfies and more action to confront the emergency.

What the country craves is fewer selfies and more action to confront the emergency.