
U.S. Senate on April 11 voted 56-41 to confirm the President’s nominee David Bernhardt, former oil and gas corporation and Westlands Water District lobbyist David Bernhardt, to be the Secretary of the Interior.
Senators Joe Manchin (W.Va.), Martin Heinrich (N.M.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.), as well as Sen. Angus King (I-Maine), joined Senate Republicans in voting for Bernhardt’s confirmation.
Representatives of conservation, fishing and environmental justice organizations blasted the vote, with one group calling Bernhardt the administration’s most conflict-ridden cabinet nominee.
After all of the clear documentation about his conflicts of interest and his apparent corruption, it’s really disappointing to see the Senate agree to make this guy the secretary with 56 votes, said John McManus, President of the Golden Gate Salmon Association. It seems to me that the Senate had all of the information to make a good decision and instead made a bad decision. I am fairly certain that we will be engaged for the next two years in fighting off aggressive federal government efforts to drain the Delta dry and export northern California water hundreds of miles to grow almonds instead of salmon.
It's another shameful day in Washington, DC as perhaps the most corrupt possible nominee for a cabinet position is confirmed by the Senate. The Interior Department is now fully captured by destructive industry and big money politics. I'm disgusted, echoed Noah Oppenheim, Executive Director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations.
In a statement, Western Values Project Executive Director Chris Saeger, said, President Trump and his allies in the Senate are turning back the clock to a time when land barons again rule the departments that are supposed to hold them accountable. Those special interests and corporate lobbyists now have their man at the helm of America’s largest land managing agency in former mega-lobbyist David Bernhardt. History will not look kindly on the Senators who voted to continue the decimation of America’s public lands and wildlife for the