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League of Conservation Voters

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Environmental advocacy organization in Washington, D.C., United States
League of Conservation Voters
Formation1969-1970[1][2]
FounderMarion Edey[1][3][4]
Type501(c)(4) with associatedpolitical action committee and super PAC[2]
PurposeEnvironmental advocacy
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
President
Gene Karpinski
WebsiteLCV.org

TheLeague of Conservation Voters (LCV) is an Americanenvironmental advocacy group. LCV says that it "builds political power for people and the planet." Through its affiliated super PAC, it is a major supporter of theDemocratic Party. The organization pursues its goals through voter education,voter mobilization, anddirect contributions to political candidates. LCV includes 29 state affiliates. LCV was founded in 1970 byenvironmentalist Marion Edey, with support fromDavid Brower.[1][4][5] The group's current president isGene Karpinski. It is headquartered inWashington, D.C., and has over two million members.[6]

The LCV's affiliated super PAC spends money supporting Democratic candidates and opposing Republicans; it spent $120 million in 2024 in support ofKamala Harris and other Democrats. As a 501(c)(4) nonprofit, the LCV does not legally need to disclose its donors and can make unlimited contributions to super PACs.[7]

History

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The League of Conservation Voters was founded by Marion Edey, then a young congressional staffer, who proposed a non-partisan, national pressure group for environmentalists "analogous to a political party" but endorsingDemocrats andRepublicans in a 1969 letter to David Brower, soon after he resigned from theSierra Club.[1] Brower strongly endorsed Edey's idea and came up with the name League of Conservation Voters, insisting that Edey run the new organization. The plan to form LCV as an arm of Brower's new environmental organization,Friends of the Earth, was announced in September 1969.[1][4][8] However, as it would have violated theFederal Corrupt Practices Act for LCV to be a subsidiary of a non-profit corporation like Friends of the Earth, Edey launched the organization as an independent political committee in 1970.[1]

That fall, she hired as her first employee Research Director James Rathlesberger to cover presidential politics beginning in 1971 while she concentrated on congressional. In 1972, they published environmental policy profiles of the leading presidential candidates and Rathlesberger edited an LCV Report,Nixon and the Environment (Village Voice Books, 1972).[9] The profiles were widely covered in the news as was the book by reviews, raising the level of these issues in presidential politics. Not a factor given the controversies of the 1972 campaign, they were by 1976 with Jimmy Carter’s rise.

As of 2012, Green Tech Action Fund and theAdvocacy Fund were among LCV's donors.[10] In 2024, the group's top donors included former New York City MayorMichael Bloomberg, Reuben Munger, Giovanna Randall,T. A. Barron, andAdam Lewis.[7]

In September 2024, longtime LCV presidentGene Karpinski announced that he would step down from the organization in 2025 upon the appointment of a successor.[11]

The LCV was the 20th largest donor in the 2024 campaign, spending $42.5 million in support of Democratic candidates.[12] That same year, LCV was part of a $55 million advertising campaign running climate related advertisements in six swing states on behalf ofKamala Harris.[13]

Activities

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The organization's main activities include voter education,voter mobilization, tracking voting records, endorsing or opposing candidates for political office, and financially contributing to political campaigns.[14]

The related League of Conservation Voters Action Fund (LCVAF) financially supports political candidates, most of whom are members of the Democratic Party.[10] According toOpenSecrets, LCVAF was the top-spending, non-disclosing liberal group in the 2012 election cycle, investing about $11 million in political advertisements.[15] LCV spent a total of $36 million in 2012.[16]

LCV annually names a "Dirty Dozen", a list of politicians whom the group aims to defeat because of their voting records on conservation issues. The original "Dirty Dozen" list was developed in partnership withEnvironmental Action in 1970.[17]

LCV strongly opposed many of PresidentGeorge W. Bush's environmental policies.[18]

In 2014, LCV and theNatural Resources Defense Council Action Fund launched LeadingGreen, a joint initiative toaddress climate change. In 2015, LeadingGreen was added to theDemocracy Alliance's funding portfolio.[19]

LCV strongly opposed the administration of PresidentDonald Trump and its environmental policies.[20] In September 2018, the pac pledged $60 million to help green candidates.[21] Ultimately, in the mid-term elections of 2018, the pac spent $80 million to support "green" candidates through its Victory Fund.[22] They "had enormous success electing its endorsed candidates in suburban districts last fall," wroteThe Atlantic on January 3, 2019.[23]

National Environmental Scorecard

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Then-senatorKamala Harris meeting with the LCV in 2017. As of 2019, Harris had a 100% rating.

LCV tracks the voting records of members of Congress on environmental issues in its National Environmental Scorecard, alegislative scorecard.[24]

The average scores for members of the Democratic Party are historically higher than the scores for members of the Republican Party.[25][26] According toThinkProgress, a very low score on the Scorecard means a member of Congress has not "used their time in Congress to vote with the environment in mind."[27] In 2002,Kimberley Strassel ofThe Wall Street Journal editorial board wrote that "Democratic politics...is what really drives the league's scorecard."[28]

In a 2012 report, the non-profit Rachel's Network examined the Scorecard scores for male and female members of Congress in the107th through the111th Congresses (2001 to 2010). The group found that "women in Congress vote for legislation supporting clean air, clean water, renewable energy, climate action, and public health much more often than their male counterparts."[29][30][31] The report found that some of the difference was attributable to the fact that there were "more women Democrats in both houses of Congress than there are women Republicans," and Democrats favor more pro-environmental policies, but also found that "the difference in voting patterns still persists when gender is isolated within each political party."[29] The report also found that "the gap between Republican men and women narrowed after the 2004 election cycle, which could be attributable to increased partisan pressures."[29]

The Scorecard has been cited byThe New York Times,[25]The Washington Post,[32]Bloomberg News,[33][34]U.S. News & World Report,[35]HuffPost,[36][30][31] andScientific American magazine.[26]

In 1998, scholar Anne Y. Ilinitch and collaborators used the Scorecard "to identify Senators and Representatives with unsupportive environmental voting records" in evaluated corporate political contributions as a measure of corporate environmental performance.[37] In 2004, researchers at the School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences atAuburn University averaged Scorecard scores across a state's congressional delegation as aproxy variable for the "green-ness" of constituents, and found no significant relationship with the number ofEndangered Species Act listings in a state.[38] In 2012,Robert Brulle and his collaborators investigated factors affecting U.S. public concern about the threat ofclimate change and found that "the message sent to the public by the Republican voting record on environmental bills is very influential...This result provides strong confirmation of the role of elite cues and their influence on public concern about climate change. In an extremely partisan environment, Republican votes against environmental bills legitimate public opinion opposed to action on climate change."[39]

See also

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Further reading

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References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefTurner, Tom (October 2015).David Brower: The Making of the Environmental Movement. Univ of California Press. pp. 163–165.ISBN 9780520278363.
  2. ^ab"League of Conservation Voters".FactCheck.org. Annenberg Center for Public Policy. February 13, 2014. Retrieved17 March 2015.
  3. ^"Marion Edey, Ecology Lobbyist, Is Married to Joseph Browder".The New York Times. April 24, 1972. Retrieved2019-02-25.
  4. ^abcYachnin, Jennifer (December 11, 2013)."Still 'electing the best, defeating the worst' -- but with far greater resources than before". E&E News.
  5. ^"Environmental Leader Quits Sierra Board: Correction".The New York Times. May 30, 2000. "An article by Reuters on May 20 about the resignation of David Brower from the board of the Sierra Club referred incorrectly to his association with the League of Conservation Voters. Mr. Brower was an adviser to the league; its founder was Marion Edey."
  6. ^Sabato, Larry; Ernst, Howard (2009).Encyclopedia of American Political Parties and Elections. Infobase Publishing. p. 201.ISBN 9781438109947.
  7. ^abGore, D'Angelo (5 September 2024)."League of Conservation Voters".FactCheck.org. Retrieved24 March 2025.
  8. ^Davies, Lawrence E. (September 17, 1969)."NATURALISTS GET A POLITICAL ARM; Ex-Sierra Club Chief Gives Details on Voters League".The New York Times.
  9. ^Rathlesberger, James (1972).Nixon and the Environment. New York, NY: Village Voice Books.ISBN 0-394-70790.{{cite book}}:Check|isbn= value: length (help)
  10. ^abO'Brien, Reity (October 3, 2012)."Nonprofit profile: League of Conservation Voters Inc". Center for Public Integrity. Retrieved17 March 2015.
  11. ^Cama, Timothy (17 September 2024)."Longtime LCV President Karpinski to step down".E&E News by POLITICO. Retrieved24 March 2025.
  12. ^"Meet the megadonors pumping over $2.5 billion into the election".The Washington Post. October 28, 2024. Retrieved24 March 2025.
  13. ^Astor, Maggie (19 August 2024)."Climate Groups Begin $55 Million Ad Campaign for Kamala Harris".The New York Times. Retrieved24 March 2025.
  14. ^"2018 Plan of Action - League of Conservation Voters".League of Conservation Voters. Retrieved2018-04-16.
  15. ^"League of Conservation Voters".OpenSecrets.org.OpenSecrets. Retrieved17 March 2015.
  16. ^Beckel, Michael (November 22, 2013)."League of Conservation Voters becoming 'dark money' heavyweight". Center for Public Integrity. Retrieved17 March 2015.
  17. ^Alligood, Arlene (October 29, 1970)."Two big political issues of Election '70". St. Petersburg Times. Congressional Quarterly. Retrieved17 March 2015.[dead link]
  18. ^Pegg, J.R."League of Conservation Voters Slams Bush Record" (Press release). Environment News Service. Retrieved14 March 2012.
  19. ^Vogel, Kenneth; Restuccia, Andrew (April 13, 2015)."Tom Steyer stars as liberal donors gather". Politico. Retrieved20 April 2015.
  20. ^"2017 Plan of Action - League of Conservation Voters".League of Conservation Voters. Retrieved2018-04-16.
  21. ^"Environmental group pledges $60M to help green candidates",The Hill, Sep 13, 2018
  22. ^"'A Green Wave': Signs Point to Voters Demanding Action on Climate Change",NECN, Dec 28, 2018
  23. ^"Why the New Democratic Majority Could Work Better Than the Last",The Atlantic, Jan 3, 2019
  24. ^"2012 National Environmental Scorecard Ranks Members Of Congress On Green Issues".HuffPost. February 21, 2013. RetrievedOctober 3, 2017.
  25. ^abShabecoff, Philip (October 7, 1988)."Quayle is Rated on Environment".The New York Times. RetrievedOctober 4, 2017.
  26. ^abOtto, Shawn (October 9, 2016)."A Plan to Defend against the War on Science".Scientific American. RetrievedOctober 3, 2017.
  27. ^Valentine, Katie (October 30, 2015)."These 4 Republican Senators Are Forming A Group To Tackle Climate Change".ThinkProgress. RetrievedOctober 3, 2017.
  28. ^Strassel, Kimberley (September 6, 2002). "The League of Democratic Voters".The Wall Street Journal.
  29. ^abc"When Women Lead". Rachel's Network. 2016. RetrievedOctober 4, 2017.
  30. ^abSpiegelman, Annie (May 10, 2012)."This Mother's Day, Mother Earth Wants You".HuffPost. RetrievedOctober 4, 2017.
  31. ^abMichelson, Joan (August 31, 2016)."Happy Anniversary 19th Amendment! How Have Women Voted On Energy And Environment Issues?".HuffPost. RetrievedOctober 4, 2017.
  32. ^Lee, Gary (October 29, 1996). "Environmental Groups Target Candidates; Nominees' Voting Records on Issues Appear to be Hindering some Election Attempts".The Washington Post.
  33. ^Dlouhy, Jennifer A (December 15, 2016)."Trump Turns to Hunter and Outdoorsman Zinke to Lead Interior".Bloomberg Politics. RetrievedOctober 4, 2017.
  34. ^Scott, Dean (October 4, 2016)."GOP Senators Battle to Decide Majority, Climate Direction".Environment and Energy Report.Bloomberg BNA. RetrievedOctober 4, 2017.
  35. ^Neuhauser, Alan (February 11, 2014)."Grade F: Environmental Group Flunks House GOP".U.S. News & World Report. RetrievedOctober 4, 2017.
  36. ^"Overview of the National Environmental Scorecard". League of Conservation Voters. 23 November 2012. RetrievedOctober 3, 2017.
  37. ^Ilinitch, Anne Y; Soderstrom, Naomi S; Thomas, Tom E. (1998). "Measuring corporate environmental performance".Journal of Accounting and Public Policy.17 (4–5):383–408.doi:10.1016/S0278-4254(98)10012-1.ISSN 0278-4254.
  38. ^Rawls, R. Patrick; Laband, David N. (2004). "A Public Choice Analysis of Endangered Species Listings".Public Choice.121 (3–4):263–277.doi:10.1007/s11127-004-9784-4.ISSN 0048-5829.S2CID 153964650.
  39. ^Brulle, Robert J.; Carmichael, Jason; Jenkins, J. Craig (2012). "Shifting public opinion on climate change: an empirical assessment of factors influencing concern over climate change in the U.S., 2002–2010".Climatic Change.114 (2):169–188.Bibcode:2012ClCh..114..169B.doi:10.1007/s10584-012-0403-y.hdl:10.1007/s10584-012-0403-y.ISSN 0165-0009.S2CID 8220644.

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