Climate denial is rampant in both Australia’s governing party and the Rupert Murdoch-owned media outlets, which endorse its leaders and promote their destructive agenda of climate inaction.
In mid-November, politicians from the conservative party went on a media blitz to downplay the links between their country’s unfolding fire emergency and the climate crisis. Key leaders within the party insisted that their political rivals making the connection were “inner city raving lunatics” and claimed that talking about climate change while the fires were burning was a “bloody disgrace.”
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has been among those both dismissing the fires’ links to climate change and refusing to treat the fires as a clarion call to act. Morrison has been widely criticized for his handling of the emergency, his stance on climate change, and his continued promotion of coal.
In interviews and op-eds for major U.S. newspapers, on social media, and in letters to local city papers, Australians have been challenging Morrison and his party’s unwavering climate denial in the face of the country’s evident devastation.
Three segments airing on U.S. broadcast news programs -- 33% of all climate mentions and just 5% of all segments on the Australian fires -- covered the mounting criticism directed at Australia’s prime minister for his position on climate change in the face of the Australian fires. Two of the segments appeared on CBS, while the third appeared on NBC.
During a December 22 segment on the prime minister’s ill-timed Hawaiian vacation, CBS Weekend News edition host Errol Barnett noted that “critics charge Morrison has not done enough to fight climate change, blamed for fueling these massive and deadly fires”. The network also reported the criticism during a segment airing on CBS Evening News on December 31. Daniel Sutton, correspondent for CBS’ sister network in Australia, reported, “Australia’s prime minister, who’s being criticized for his lack of action on climate change, is sending in military aircraft to help and assist with evacuations” for the thousands of people trapped on beaches of Australia’s southeast coastline awaiting rescue from the surrounding fires.
And during her segment on NBC's Today show on January 6, Mackey Frayer noted, “There is mounting pressure on Australia's prime minister for downplaying the control of climate change here, leaving the country ill-prepared with tourists beaches now evacuation zones, wildlife populations wiped out, and much of the coast in flames.”
While all three of the segments noted the criticism in their coverage, none provided a substantive discussion about the dangers of denial in the face of this climate emergency or what denial and inaction will mean for future climate-driven catastrophes.