In Iowa, the nation's second-leading wind energy producer, Clinton said people are "just not paying attention" if they don't acknowledge climate change.
"This is not complicated folks," the former secretary of state told more than 200 people at Iowa State University yesterday. "I'm just a grandmother with two eyes and a brain. And I know we're facing huge problem."
Climate change has become a key issue in the Democratic presidential primary, where Clinton is the heavy favorite. Though Clinton hinted that under her plan the coal industry would face changes, she said the federal government would help the industry.
Sen Bernie Sanders, a Democratic candidate for president to the left of Clinton who has been attracting increasingly larger crowds, told voters yesterday in Louisiana, where a gunman opened fire in a movie theater Thursday night, that common ground can be found on gun control.
"Coming from a rural state, I think I can communicate with folks coming from urban states where guns mean different things than they do in Vermont where it's used for hunting," Sanders said. "That's where we've got to go. We don't have to argue with each other and yell at each other. We need a common sense solution."
He capped a weekend of Louisiana events with a rally in a suburban New Orleans convention hall that drew close to 4,000 people.
Former Maryland Gov Martin O'Malley, also seeking the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination, noted yesterday that he unveiled a climate change plan in Iowa. Campaign aides to O'Malley said that as governor, he made climate change a top priority, doubled Maryland's renewable fuel production, and reduced greenhouse gases by 10 percent during his two terms.
