
Billings, Mont. (AP) – Young workers and their lawyers who won a historic global warming trial against the state Montana have tried to persuade a federal judge to stop President Donald Trump’s executive orders to promote foam fuel.
During a two -day hearing in Montana’s Masola on Tuesday, workers and their experts have planned to promote drilling and mining and renewable energy as a growing threat to children and the planet. He says the acquisition of Republican global warming is a violation of their constitutional rights.
The victory for the workers will have a much wider impact than their 2023 wins, where a state court made the mistake of allowing personnel to allow oil, gas and coal projects, regardless of global warming.
But legal experts say that young workers and their lawyers belonging to the environmental group face our Children’s Trust in the federal court. Montana’s case is linked to a clause in the state constitution in which people have been declared that people have the right to “a clean and healthy environment.” That language is absent from the US Constitution.
“The federal law does not really offer anything for these groups to work for these groups,” said David Dana, a professor at North Western University Law School in Chicago.
Apart from the US Department of Justice and 19 states, Guam wants Judge Dana Cristinson to reject the case.
From our Children’s Trust, the former federal climate case in Oregon continued for a decade and ended this year in a denial of the US Supreme Court.
Our Children’s Trust Attorney Andrea Rogers said that the constitution contains reservations for life and independence that cannot be ignored.
Rogers said, “We are asking the court to implement the traditional laws in this regard what is the right of life and the right to freedom.”
White House spokesman Taylor Rogers said that Trump has eliminated the preferential treatment of some sectors of the energy industry under his predecessor.
Rogers said in an email, “President Trump declared an energy emergency one day in the best interests of the American people to protect our economic and national security. He will continue the US energy.”
22 plants include young and young adults from Montana and several other states.
A 19 -year -old California -based young man plans to testify to Krostinson about the loss of jungle smoke. A 17 -year -old man from Montana has to talk about Trump that she disappoints efforts to get electric buses for her school. And a 20 -year -old Oregon woman going to school in Florida will talk about Trump’s plans that could damage hurricanes and forest fires.
“It doesn’t matter where I live, I cannot avoid extreme climate incidents as a result of fossil fuel pollution wherever I live.”
This is a playbox like a 2023 trial: Young plaintiffs spent days stating what kind of air they spoil, while drought and decreased, which maintains snapc’s rivers, fish, forest life and entertainment.
Another legal win of our Children’s Trust also came out of the state court. Last year, children and adolescents arrived in a historic settlement in Hawaii, which included the need for renovation of the state’s transport system over the next 21 years.
Only a few other states, including Illinois, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New York, have been included in their circles.
Carbon dioxide, which is released at the time of burning fossil fuel, traps the heat in the environment and is widely responsible for the heat of the climate.
Montana’s Attorney General Austin Nodson’s Director of Communications Amanda Brianic said the states are trying to prevent litigation from “eliminating our country’s energy safety”.
Federal government and state lawyers are expected to present arguments but not call any witnesses.
Jonathan Adler, a law expert at William and Mary Law School in Virginia, said that even if the workers lose, it could draw attention to the failures to work against Trump’s climate change.
“These cases are not always the case in the court, but also in the court of public opinion,” said Edler.
Montana’s Supreme Court upheld the results of the trial of 2023 last year, under which officials needed to closely analyze climate warming emissions. To date, it has made some meaningful changes in the state under the republican influence.
Montana Utility Regulators rejected a request from environmentalists this month who wanted the idea of climate change to play a major role in the state’s Public Service Commission decisions.
Government Greg Gyanfort said the Associated Press Montana needs more electricity, including fossil fuel.
He said, “We have a responsibility to protect our constitution and only morally.