Blog
What’s Next
- Refine by Remove filter
- Theme
-
Author
- Mohammed Al-Shawaf
- Ramon Arratia
- Alicia Ayars
- Jennifer Biringer
- Clive Bloom
- Frances Buckingham
- Rob Cameron
- Caroline Chisholm
- Kyra Choucroun
- Cécile Churet
- Lindsay Clinton
- John Elkington
- Tania Ellis
- Jeff Erikson
- Suzanne Fallender
- Paul Gilding
- Chris Guenther
- Alex Hammer
- Andy Hoffman
- Caren Holzman
- Gary Kendall
- Geoff Kendall
- Judy Kuszewski
- Mark Lee
- Simon Lee
- Clarissa Lins
- Geoff Lye
- Heather Mak
- Sam Mountford
- LIz Muller
- Alexander Nick
- Kavita Prakash-Mani
- Jean-Philippe Renaut
- Michael Sadowski
- John Schaetzl
- Preetum Shenoy
- Thomas Singer
- Koann Skrzyniarz
- Rachel Steiman
- Elvira Thissen
- Sophia Tickell
- Luke Upchurch
- Shankar Venkateswaran
- Patrin Watanatada
- Eric Whan
- Kyle Whitaker
- Conor Woodman
- Peter Zollinger
- Date
-

The US Climate Action Partnership (USCAP), once the primary spokesman for the corporate sector on climate change in Washington, has gone dormant. Why? The reasons are multiple. Climate legislation is a nonstarter in Washington. The term itself has become toxic, that sharply divides the political left and right.