EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin didn’t mince words during a heated segment on CNN’s State of the Union this past Sunday, where he gave guest host Kasie Hunt a much-needed lesson on the law, energy policy, and government overreach. The exchange, which was clearly meant to paint Zeldin as a so-called “climate denier,” quickly backfired as Zeldin pushed back with facts, legal precedent, and common sense.
The clash centered on the Trump administration’s bold proposal to repeal the Obama-era 2009 “endangerment finding”—a controversial declaration that claims man-made greenhouse gas emissions pose a danger to public health. Zeldin pointed out that undoing this finding would be the most sweeping deregulatory action in U.S. history—one that would allow for more energy freedom, reduce government overreach, and give Americans more affordable options when buying cars.
“This isn’t about ignoring science,” Zeldin stressed. “It’s about correcting years of politicized, fear-driven assumptions that have failed to come true.”
During the segment, Hunt tried desperately to push the climate narrative, loading her questions with emotional buzzwords and doomsday predictions. But Zeldin wasn’t having it.
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