Current:Home > FinanceFact Check: Did Kamala Harris Sue Exxon Over Climate Change? -OceanicInvest
Fact Check: Did Kamala Harris Sue Exxon Over Climate Change?
View
Date:2025-04-27 13:26:22
While she was pitching herself as a tough former California prosecutor who would lead on the climate crisis and make polluters pay, Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris asserted Wednesday that she had sued the world’s biggest private-sector oil company.
As California attorney general, Harris in 2016 joined an alliance of top state law enforcers who vowed to investigate whether ExxonMobil or any fossil fuel company broke the law by misleading the public—and, in particular, shareholders—over the risks of climate change. The coalition was announced after InsideClimate News reported on the history of Exxon’s emerging understanding of climate change science in the 1970s and its subsequent efforts to challenge the scientific consensus.
New York filed such a lawsuit last October. But did Harris ever sue Exxon?
The answer appears to be no. No lawsuit was filed against Exxon while Harris was California attorney general from 2011 to 2017, the state Office of the Attorney General confirmed Thursday.
Her campaign spokesman took to Twitter to portray the controversy as an unfair quibble over whether Harris “investigated” or “sued” Exxon. But Harris clearly was attempting to convey that she had a record of taking law enforcement action against Big Oil over climate change, and that such litigation would be an integral part of her climate plan.
“This is what we did with the tobacco companies,” she said on CNN’s Climate Crisis Town Hall. “We sued them. We took them to court because you know what happens? People who profit from harmful behaviors, when you take away that money because you take them to court and sue them as I have done, it’s extraordinary how they will change behaviors.”
“Would you sue them?” asked CNN’s Erin Burnett. “Sue ExxonMobil?”
“I have sued ExxonMobil,” Harris shot back, provoking applause.
InsideClimate News could find no evidence that Harris had ever filed a lawsuit against Exxon, including while she was district attorney of San Francisco between 2004 and 2011.
Sher Edling, a San Francisco-based law firm spearheading civil litigation against Exxon on behalf of communities based on the company’s past knowledge of climate risks, said it can’t find any record of litigation by Harris involving Exxon. Columbia University’s database of climate change litigation has no record of a suit. Even the pro-oil industry advocacy organization, Energy in Depth, said on its blog that neither Harris nor her successor ever filed suit against Exxon.
The San Francisco District Attorney’s Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In response to a query over the statement by InsideClimate News, Harris’ campaign forwarded a link to an anonymously sourced 2016 Los Angeles Times report that Harris was reviewing what Exxon knew about global warming and what the company told investors.
Harris did not confirm the investigation at that time. Nor is there any indication Harris undertook an active investigation by issuing subpoenas, as did the attorneys general of New York, Massachusetts and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The New York and Massachusetts investigations came to light because of Exxon’s aggressive legal countermoves against the attorneys general in those states; Exxon unsuccessfully sued them for a conspiracy to deprive the company of its First Amendment rights and silence its views on climate change.
Harris’ campaign staff did not respond to a request to provide the complaints or the name of the court and case numbers for any public documents to verify the senator’s statement that she has sued Exxon.
Harris’ spokesman, Ian Sams, bristled at the questions being raised over Harris’ statement. “Trump spent the morning potentially illegally teasing out jobs numbers and lying about a massive hurricane’s trajectory, but sure, let’s spend our time on whether, as Attorney General, Kamala ‘sued’ vs. ‘investigated’ Exxon, he said Thursday on Twitter.
Harris has sued other fossil fuel companies, but not Exxon, and not over climate change. Just before leaving her position as California Attorney General to assume her Senate seat, Harris announced a $14 million settlement with BP and Atlantic Richfield over allegations that the companies improperly maintained underground gasoline storage tank laws.
The announcement also recapped litigation settlements with other oil companies, including Chevron and ConocoPhillips, back to 2011.
Harris was one of 17 attorneys general who signalled support for a fraud investigation of the company. She did not appear in person, as six other attorneys general did, but sent a representative to an announcement by the alliance, AGs United for Clean Power.
It was a long road to the lawsuit ultimately filed last fall by only one of the law enforcers—former New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood—a case that is scheduled to go to trial this fall.
Published Sept. 5, 2019
veryGood! (993)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Judge suggests change to nitrogen execution to let inmate pray and say final words without gas mask
- Tesla moves forward with a plan to build an energy-storage battery factory in China
- Japan’s Cabinet OKs record $56 billion defense budget for 2024 to accelerate strike capability
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Cristina Pacheco, foremost chronicler of street life in Mexico for half a century, has died at 82
- Vin Diesel accused of sexual battery by former assistant in new lawsuit
- Vin Diesel accused of sexual battery by former assistant in civil lawsuit
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- AP-Week in Pictures-North America
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- More than 20,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israel-Hamas war, Gaza health officials say
- Single-engine plane crashes at Georgia resort, kills pilot
- New Mexico prepares for June presidential primary amid challenge to Trump candidacy
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Vin Diesel accused of sexual battery by former assistant in civil lawsuit
- 'In shock': Mississippi hunter bags dwarf deer with record-sized antlers
- The Excerpt podcast: Specks of plastic are in our bodies and everywhere else, too
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid store hours: Are pharmacies open Christmas Eve and Christmas Day?
THINGS TO KNOW: Deadline looms for new map in embattled North Dakota redistricting lawsuit
ICHCOIN Trading Center: Cryptocurrency Payments Becoming a New Trend
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Czechs mourn 14 dead and dozens wounded in the worst mass shooting in the country’s history
Derek Hough Shares Update on Wife Hayley Erbert's Health After Skull Surgery
You'll Shine in These 21 Plus-Size New Year's Eve Dresses Under $50