What do we consider before we endorse a candidate?
First and foremost: a candidate’s actions (repeating the phrase “Green New Deal” in a stump speech doesn’t count). Have they helped organize a youth climate march? Do they have experience in renewable energy? Are they working at the state or local level to pass climate-friendly bills and looking to level up?
In primaries, we won’t endorse without a survey out to local climate hawks that demonstrates grassroots consensus on a candidate’s climate action credentials.
We also look at viability, although we will back long-shots when we find a compelling reason to do so. We do not endorse mediocre Democrats, no matter how vehemently a Republican opponent may deny climate science. We only endorse when we are convinced that the candidate will commit to strong climate action.
And our endorsements pay off. In 2018, we won 75 percent of the primaries where we endorsed – a better track record than any of the larger groups whose endorsement records were compiled by FiveThirtyEight. In 2020, we endorsed in six races each in the House and Senate, and our candidates won five in each chamber – a win record of 87 percent. And in 2022 when everyone was freaking out about a red wave election, we kept calm and focused on the climate hawks – wining 8 of our 10 endorsed races, helping to hold the Senate and deliver Kevin McCarthy the smallest and least effective Republican majority in history.
Climate Hawks Vote does not accept contributions from fossil fuel corporations, executives, or lobbyists. We are a federal Super PAC, which means that we are an independent expenditure committee. We do network with others to look out for climate hawks who can think globally and lead locally.
Kamala Harris
It’s time for climate hawks to flock together and defeat Donald Trump and his toxic brand of politics
Ruben Gallego
Ruben is a veteran and a climate hawk running to replace the Narcissist and no-longer-Democrat Sinema.
Sue Altman
Sue Altman is a fighter who knows how to stand up to corrupt New Jersey Politicians.
Christina Bohannan
With a blue wave coming to cool the planet, climate hawks are all in for Law professor and former state environmental engineer Christina Bohannan!
Kirsten Engel
It's time to elect a law professor who wrote the Supreme Court brief calling for greenhouse gas regulations, in the state that will be vital to the Senate and Presidential election.
Josh Riley
Josh Riley saw what happens when upstate New York towns got sold out and now, he's running for Congress – on the Inflation Reduction Act.
Monica Tranel
Climate Hawks Vote is endorsing Monica Tranel: for control of Congress, for Montana, and against Ryan Zinke.