Vice President Kamala Harris dismissed a heckler at a recent event after the man began shouting about Harris’ lack of effort in addressing climate change.
The Daily Caller shared a video posted to X (formerly Twitter) on Tuesday afternoon that showed a heckler interrupting Harris’ speech. He can be heard yelling above the vice president, who is speaking at a podium. He yelled so loudly at times that Harris could not be heard.
Harris was scheduled to speak in Seattle on Tuesday about President Joe Biden’s climate and clean energy efforts, but Newsweek could not confirm the video was from that event.
“We are in the middle of a climate emergency. Eighty people have died in Hawaii, Thousands have been displaced by the climate chaos,” the protester yelled. “The planet is burning, and people are dying.”
“I’m speaking,” Harris responded as the heckler was removed from the crowd by security.
Watch the clip below:
WATCH:
— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) August 15, 2023
Kamala Harris heckled by climate change activist
HECKLER: "80 people are dying in Hawaii…Thousands are displaced by climate chaos."
HARRIS: "I'm speaking." pic.twitter.com/EmKFUmgOc6
Last week, deadly wildfires raged across Hawaii. The fires spread across several islands, spurred by winds from Hurricane Dora, and hit Maui particularly hard. It is believed the fires were generated by a mix of hot and dry conditions, but their direct cause is not yet known.
As of Tuesday, at least 99 people were reported dead from the devastating fire that engulfed parts of Maui, and the island’s historic town of Lahaina was mostly destroyed. Thousands of people were displaced, and hundreds of others remain missing. Search-and-rescue efforts continued to comb through the rubble.
Biden issued a disaster declaration for the state two days after the fires began, which allows for federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts. The White House has not said if Biden or Harris will be traveling to Hawaii in the aftermath of the wildfires.
On Tuesday, Biden posted on social media that he had recently had a conversation with Hawaii Governor Josh Green.
I just got off the phone with @GovJoshGreenMD – following a call with @FEMA_Deanne – to discuss Hawai'i's recovery after the deadliest wildfire in a century that has claimed 99 lives.
— President Biden (@POTUS) August 15, 2023
I reassured the Governor that Hawai'i will continue to have everything it needs from the… pic.twitter.com/dE7awuUUU5
“I reassured the Governor that Hawai’i will continue to have everything it needs from the federal government, and directed [Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell] to keep surging resources and personnel as long as it takes. Every asset they need will be there for them,” Biden wrote.
However, the president stopped short of saying that he would visit the disaster-stricken state.
Shortly after Biden’s comments, Bloomberg reporter Jennifer Jacobs wrote on X that Biden had promised he would travel to Hawaii as soon as he could. Biden made that comment during an event in Wisconsin.
"My wife and I are going to travel to Hawaii as soon as we can," Biden says, reading from remarks at an event in Wisconsin. He says his admin will continue to coordinate with officials on the ground to help people affected by the fires in Maui.
— Jennifer Jacobs (@JenniferJJacobs) August 15, 2023
During the heckling of Harris’ speech, the man pressed Harris on efforts to combat climate change.
“We were wondering if you would uphold your promises,” he said. “You and Joe are failing on climate.”
Last August, Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act, which dedicated $369 billion to go toward America’s green energy transition. The law aims for a 40 percent reduction in national carbon emissions by 2030 while also spurring growth in the green energy sector by providing tax credits for the purchase of electric vehicles and solar panels.
Climate change continues to affect the severity of natural disasters, and experts say that will remain the case as long as global warming exists.
“We can expect the kinds of conditions experiencing now to continue to intensify in the future as global warming continues,” Noah Diffenbaugh, a professor at Stanford’s Doerr School of Sustainability, previously told Newsweek.
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HEHEHEHEEHHAHAHAH WHAT HAPPEN TO THE WORD SALAD
I am so sick and tired of climate activists. They blow every. single. natural phenomenon way out of proportion. Fires are good. They bring about new life. Yes, this one was bad, but it’s not due to climate change or any other scary word they want to use to scare the brainless like this guy who thought it was appropriate to scream at the Vice President or those nutters across the pond who think it’s ok to disrupt traffic and peoples lives, through paint on irreplaceable pieces of history or ruin weddings and so on and so forth.