Fox_Zeldin_climate

Media Matters / Andrea Austria

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In his first 100 days as EPA administrator, Lee Zeldin has used his frequent Fox appearances to shape the climate discourse

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin has used his many appearances on Fox News and Fox Business to become one of the most visible members of the Trump administration so far. A Media Matters analysis found that Zeldin made at least 36 appearances on cable news during his first 100 days as EPA administrator, with 35 of those occurring on Fox networks — the most of any Trump Cabinet official.

Appearing on networks that are friendly to Trump’s agenda has allowed Zeldin to push climate-related misinformation and shape the discourse around environmental issues as he  emerges “as one of the most devoted public champions” of Trump’s quest to “demolish the Biden agenda.”

Staples of Zeldin’s Fox appearances have included promoting rollbacks of environmental safeguards, hyping cuts and the elimination of programs at the EPA, and pushing the campaign to claw back congressionally allocated climate funds. He has also appeared on Fox to defend Trump’s orders to boost coal and muddy the waters on the root causes of the Tijuana River sewage issue. 

  • Zeldin appeared twice as much as Trump’s first EPA administrator, Scott Pruitt, in half the time

  • Lee Zeldin is far outpacing his recent Trump administration predecessors in cable news appearances. 

    During the first six months of his tenure, Trump’s first-term EPA administrator, Scott Pruitt, appeared 15 times across cable news — Fox News (12 appearances), CNN (2) and MSNBC (1). 

    Andrew Wheeler, who served as Pruitt’s deputy and assumed the top spot after Pruitt resigned amid scandal, appeared only 3 times on cable while serving in the position, all on Fox.

  • Zeldin is using Fox to push misinformation about climate funding

  • Fox News has aired more than 50 segments amplifying Zeldin’s false claims that $20 billion in federal climate grants allocated by Congress through the Inflation Reduction Act were mired in waste, fraud, and abuse. In fact, the network's coverage has been largely informed by Zeldin while Fox has omitted important details of the story reported by other news outlets that challenge his claims. 

    The administration tried to freeze the IRA funds, using the claims of waste and fraud, but a federal judge chastized the agency for failing to provide “credible evidence” for the claims. Even after the EPA was rebuffed in court, Zeldin’s public campaign to demonize the climate grants — many of which were intended to reduce climate and air pollution and mobilize public and private capital in underserved communities — and their recipients has continued undeterred on Fox networks.

  • Here’s how Zeldin is using Fox appearances to shape the discourse around a number of environmental issues

  • Environmental protections

    On March 12, Zeldin announced sweeping measures to undo environmental protections and radically reshape the agency’s mission in what he has proudly called the “largest deregulatory announcement in U.S. history.” 

    As part of these actions, Zeldin has redefined the mission of the EPA. Rather than focusing on the agency’s twin tenets of environmental protection and public health, Zeldin has promised to fulfill “President Trump’s promise to unleash American energy, lower cost of living for Americans, revitalize the American auto industry, restore the rule of law, and give power back to states to make their own decisions.” And he has used Fox networks to promote and justify this shift. 

    Zeldin has claimed on Fox programs that current environmental protections need to be rolled back because they are "suffocating the economy” and that they have nothing to do with environmental protection but rather are part of former President Joe Biden’s “green new scam.” Zeldin’s arguments neatly position environmental safeguards into a pre-existing Fox News narrative that demonizes all climate action. 

    On the March 16 edition of Fox & Friends Weekend, host Charlie Hurt reflected this characterization of regulations back to Zeldin, saying: “Green New Deal things have nothing to do with actually cleaning the environment or clean air or clean water. It more has to do with spending money on pet projects that benefit basically, like, political supporters of the Democrat party.”

    Such claims discount the role of environmental protections in public health and corporate polluter accountability. For example, Zeldin wants to loosen wastewater regulations for coal and other steam-powered power plants and relax limits to the amount of mercury and other toxic metals power plants can emit. Zeldin claims these regulations “improperly targeted coal-fired power plants,” even though coal plants emit “the vast majority of mercury and other toxic air pollution.” 

    The EPA also wants to make it easier for manufacturers to release more particulate matter, or soot, even though “exposure to these tiny particles has been linked to asthma attacks, heart attacks, strokes and other ailments.” In fact, one analysis, based on a 2024 report from the Environmental Protection Network that assessed the public health benefits of various EPA regulations, found that the targeted rules “were set to save the lives of nearly 200,000 people in the years ahead.” 

    Environmental justice

    Zeldin is redefining environmental justice efforts as “forced discrimination programs” in order to nix it as part of Trump’s executive order on “ending radical and wasteful government DEI programs and preferences.” 

    To that end, he has closed the Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights and signaled that he is “eliminating all diversity, equity and inclusion and environmental justice offices and positions immediately,” leaving under-resourced grassroots environmental justice groups to take over these efforts. Hundreds of environmental justice grants are being canceled as well. 

    On Fox, Zeldin has repeatedly suggested that the EPA previously used terms like “environmental justice” to “justify spending money not on actually directly remediating challenges to land, air, and water in America, but to funding left-wing activist groups.”

    Zeldin used similar language in Fox coverage when he announced the closure of the EPA museum, calling it “another tribute to environmental justice” and saying: “What's amazing is over the course over this last administration, all this talk about environmental justice and climate change, it was really to justify giving out tens of billions of dollars to their friends through self-dealing conflicts of interests, unqualified recipients.” Zeldin’s closure of the EPA museum was covered by at least 5 other Fox News programs.

    Tijuana River sewage issue

    The Tijuana River sewage issue is one of the first specific environmental issues Zeldin discussed on Fox News. Every year, billions of gallons of sewage and toxic industrial waste flow down the Tijuana River, across the U.S.-Mexico border, and into the Pacific Ocean. It is a complex, decades-old, transjurisdictional issue that environmentalists and governments at the local, state, and federal level have been grappling with for years. 

    Zeldin has predominately characterized this issue as Mexico’s failure to stop pollution from crossing the border, while largely ignoring Mexico’s efforts to improve the problem and other progress made by the Biden administration. 

    For example, in March 2024, federal funding was secured to make the repairs and updates needed at California’s South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant. And in December, Biden approved $250 million in additional funding “towards the full repair and expansion of the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant,” which is expected to be functional in the next five years.   

    In January 2024, Mexico began rehabilitating a shuttered wastewater treatment plant, the San Antonio de los Buenos plant, and on April 28 of this year, the plant started treating waste again. Taken together, the improvements to the U.S. waste treatment plant and the wastewater infrastructure in Mexico are “intended to eliminate up to 90% of untreated wastewater reaching the coast.”

    Fox News has aired at least a dozen segments on the issue, many of which have been shaped by Zeldin’s framing.

  • Here’s how Fox personalities are responding to Zeldin’s deregulatory efforts

  • Zeldin's Fox-heavy communications strategy has allowed him to dodge tough questioning and push misleading talking points with limited rebuttal. Fox hosts have rarely probed the consequences of cutting climate and environmental programs and rolling back safeguards, instead echoing his argument that previous government climate initiatives “didn’t really have anything to do with protecting the environment.”

    Here are three examples of Fox News and Fox Business hosts teeing up Zeldin to talk about deregulation of environmental protections, efforts to boost coal, and “media attacks” on his actions. 

    On Sunday Night in America, host Trey Gowdy set up Zeldin to push the narrative that the protections he’s rolling back were part of a political agenda rather than pertinent to public health and safety:

  • TREY GOWDY (HOST): We all want clean water and air, period. But regulation has gotten out of control, and it’s used to advance political agendas. Lee Zeldin aims to change that. He recently terminated a $2 billion grant that started doling out money after Harris lost. He joins us now. Welcome to you, Mr. Administrator. Have you already identified areas of regulation which do nothing to advance safety or health, but simply advance a political agenda?

  • On the April 1 edition of Larry Kudlow’s Fox Business program, Kudlow hosted Zeldin to discuss the EPA’s efforts to “grow the economy” and slash “red tape.” Kudlow congratulated the administrator on his recent deregulatory actions: “Thirty-one rule changes in one day at EPA. That's probably a world record, Lee Zeldin.”  

    Kudlow went on to reflect Zeldin’s characterization of environmental protection as radical: “A lot of the Biden stuff didn't really have anything to do with protecting the environment. It had to do with their radical Green New Deal climate change stuff. I mean, protecting the environment is very important. ... But this stuff has nothing to do with that.”

    On April 10, Fox Business anchor Maria Bartiromo asked for Zeldin’s reaction to Trump’s so-called “clean coal” plan. She also applauded the agency for stripping grants from environmental justice projects and gave him a platform to respond to recent reporting from Politico on his shift from “‘pro-climate Republican to ‘one of the Trump disruptors”:

  • MARIA BARTIROMO (ANCHOR): You’ve said that the EPA is already reinvigorating America’s clean coal industry?

    LEE ZELDIN (EPA ADMINISTRATOR):  … At EPA just over four weeks ago, we announced what amounted to the largest deregulatory action in the history of the country. Just one agency was able to do that. Why? Because at the end of the Biden administration in 2023 and 2024, there were all sorts of regulations coming out. And as it related to the coal industry, the Biden EPA was trying to strangulate the coal industry out of existence.

    … 

    BARTIROMO: I mean, look, you've been doing so well. I love the fact that you're taking costs out while also opening up the spigot of opportunities in energy. Your interview with Laura Ingraham recently was fantastic as you walked us through the building. Now the EPA is refusing to give Oregon an $85 million Biden-era grant meant to fund environmental justice projects in the state. You have uncovered lots of things that aren't exactly what they seem, Lee. These actions ramp up media attacks on you. Politico wrote this: “From pro-climate Republican to one of the Trump disruptors, EPA administrator Lee Zeldin's attacks on his agency’s spending and regulations have made him a rising star in the Trump cabinet but left some former colleagues mystified.”

  • Methodology

  • Media Matters searched our internal database of all original, weekday programming on Fox News Channel (shows airing from 6 a.m. through midnight) for segments that analysts determined to include EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin from January 29, when he was confirmed as administrator to the EPA, through May 9, 2025, which marked his first 100 days as administrator.

    Media Matters also searched transcripts in the SnapStream video database for all original programming on CNN, Fox Business Network, Fox News Channel, and MSNBC for either of the terms “Zeldin” or “EPA administrator” over the same period.

    We included guest segments, which we defined as instances when CNN, Fox Business, Fox News, or MSNBC hosted Zeldin on one of their shows. Appearances could be as solo interviews or as a part of panels.