Skip to content
Pride Month: Advancing Belonging Through Visibility, Scholarship, and Community
Apply
Stories

Disaster on the ballot

People in this story

Aerial view of a flooded area of Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil.

Grist, August 2024

Hello, and welcome to the first issue of State of Emergency, a limited-run newsletter from Grist. My name is Zoya Teirstein, and I’ll be co-reporting this project with my colleague Jake Bittle. We’re glad you’re here.

Data shows that while some voters rank climate change among their top political priorities, it rarely factors into their decisions on Election Day. More than anything else, the health of the economy — and, perhaps more importantly, voters’ perceptions of it — typically dictates which candidates garner the most votes. But that doesn’t mean climate change is entirely absent in the ballot box. “Disasters typically increase voter turnout. Either people are really pissed or they’re thrilled — the government actually came through for them.”

Read more on Grist.

More Stories

10/21/19 - BOSTON, MA. - Phil Brown, director of the Social Science Environmental Health Research Institute and University distinguished professor of sociology and health sciences, poses for a portrait on October 21, 2019. Photo by Ruby Wallau/Northeastern University

This researcher is building a future free of forever chemicals

06.25.2026

Young adults given up to $1,000 to start investing in groundbreaking new study

06.23.2026

The Defiance of Marjane Satrapi

06.25.26
In the News