amazing. their family tonight. thank you forgo saying those words, sean. and i ll take over where youer left off. i m laura ingram .e this is the ingraham angle on a very busy washingtonha tonight. we ll starts i off with this. th the bigger tent. that s t the focus of tonight s angle. okay, here s my message to you. if you read one article this week about our political parties, it should be this piece just published by axios titled the great realignment. th nowat the gist is thatep republicans are becoming ubmore populist while democrats are becoming more elitist. and if theseor trends continue,b the party of bidenid and pelosi is destined for historic losses in the next few election cycles and not just in traditionally red states, by the way, shift in the demographics of the teaer party supporters taking place before our eyes are arguably the biggest political story of our time. the big pictureme republicans ae becoming more working class and a little more multiracial.
the entire planet is inje jeopardy. climate change is increasing the pace and intensityre ofen natural disasters. congress can and should provide> individuals and businesses with long term incentives to speed up the transitionh es to cheaper, cleaner sources of power. crazy easy.az well, that apocalyptic language threatens to disrupt the future of civilizededt t. li i m not being dramatic because the current economic downturn has been worsened by countries chiefly in europe that starteded moving away from proven energy sources. now they re desperately trying to move back to coal or nuclear. but it s kind of too late. and instead of thoughtful pieces about the failure of that approach, we are treated to opinion masquerading as news and masquerading as science like this from bloombergrgs, global shocks have forced europe to turn back toward coalc power, heat wave drying out swaths of the continent. so the danger of backsliding on climate goals. no, no, the danger would