Politicians and climate activists say Trump's victory wouldn't stop their efforts
At a Tuesday night event, politicians and climate activists, including actress Jane Fonda, delivered a strong message to the incoming Trump administration: they will continue fighting for climate progress and Trump's agenda will not stop them.
Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass. told a crowd gathered at George Washington University, "It is time, after one month, for us to get up and begin to fight," adding, "The power of this movement is undeniable, and unlike the incoming president, our record of victory is unimpeachable."
Despite the incoming administration's "doomsday day one agenda," activists and advocates from the climate movement would push for change in Congress, in board rooms and in the streets, he said.
"The planet is running a fever," Markey said. "There are no emergency rooms for planets, so we have to engage in the preventative care which is necessary to save this planet and the people on this planet, and we know we're going to face an uphill battle with a climate denier in chief."
Climate activist and actress Jane Fonda called on those who care about climate progress to stand together and welcome new people into the movement's tent – even those who voted for President-elect Trump.
"Seventy-eight million Americans voted for Trump. They are not all part of the MAGA movement," Fonda said. "Many of them did so because they're suffering financially, they're scared, they're confused and they're angry because the neo-liberal leaders of the Democratic Party have ignored them for so many decades, and so they took a chance on the burn-it-all-down option."
Fonda, a longtime activist, became involved in the climate movement during the first Trump administration by hosting "Fire Drill Fridays" in front of the U.S. Capitol. These weekly protests often led to her arrest.
At Tuesday night's event, Fonda wore the same bright red coat she wore during her "fire drills," noting that it was her "blanket and pillow when I turned 82 in jail."

"Standing here today in my red coat, I hereby declare myself part of the resistance," Fonda said.
Fonda also encouraged listeners to focus on down-ballot races and initiatives to address climate change.
Since becoming a climate activist, Fonda has started a political action committee dedicated to electing "climate champions." In 2024, she said the PAC endorsed 154 candidates, telling the audience at the event that her PAC's candidates won at a ratio of two-to-one.
Local activists, like Roishetta Ozane, spoke about the importance of not forgetting the communities that are feeling the impacts of climate change firsthand, saying, "These are our real lives and we are real people."
In her home state of Louisiana, Ozane has been advocating against the implementation and use of liquified natural gas pipelines, arguing that her area has suffered adverse health and environmental effects from local LNG production efforts.
One of the projects Ozane has advocated against, Calcasieu Pass 2, which would represent an expansion of one of the existing LNG projects in the area, was just delayed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission earlier this week.
-ABC News Climate Unit's Kelly Livingston







