For Immediate Release Contact: Trey Pollard, (202) 495-3058
October 23, 2012
Sierra Club Launches “Big Polluters, Bad Politics” Interactive Advertising Campaign
New Website Will Give Americans A Chance to Push Back on the Influence of Fossil Fuel Industry Money
(Washington, DC) - Today, The Sierra Club launched “Big Polluters, Bad Politics,” an interactive online platform that gives Americans the chance to fight back against the corrosive influence of the dirty energy industry this election cycle. The website allows voters to easily create their own humorous political ads and share them with their friends and social networks, giving them a voice despite the deluge of ads paid for by Big Oil and Big Coal companies.
“By spending hundreds of millions of dollars, big oil, gas, and coal companies are trying to drown out the voices of millions of Americans who support clean energy innovation,” said Cathy Duvall, Sierra Club Director of Public Advocacy and Partnerships. “This project will give Americans a chance to cut through the polluted airwaves and push back against big polluters and their dirty politics.”
According to a mid-September analysis by the New York Times, the fossil fuel industry has already spent more then $150 million this election cycle on television ads smearing clean energy, pushing dirty energy, and attacking President Obama. Meanwhile, oil billionaires David and Charles Koch have announced plans to spend upwards of $400 million to defeat the President. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has even gone as far as to name oil executive Harold Hamm and coal lobbyist Jim Talent as two of his top energy advisers.
The “Big Polluters, Bad Politics” website features a library of images based on the theme of fossil fuel industry political spending. Users can enter their own text to create an ad and enter to win a PUBLIC bicycle. Sierra Club will also feature the most popular ad on their Facebook page.
###
The Sierra Club Voter Education Fund seeks to educate voters about public health and other issues of critical importance to the American people during the 2012 election, and encourage the public to find out more about all sides of these issues. |