After a couple of weeks of Washington
insiders speculating about which people
might be selected for two of the
nation's key environmental posts,
President-Elect Barack Obama today
formally announced the nominations of
Senator Ken Salazar of Colorado for
Secretary of the Interior and former
Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack for Secretary
of Agriculture.
Just a week ago, Congressmen Mike
Thompson (D-CA) and Raul Grijalva (D-AZ)
were supposedly on Obama's "short list"
for the Secretary of Interior. A broad
coalition of national fishing and
hunting organizations, conservation
groups and the Karuk Tribe was
supporting the nomination of Thompson,
while a coalition of environmentalists
and national Latino organizations was
backing Grijalva. As it turned out,
neither of the two apparently likely
candidates were chosen.
Obama took a shot at the Bush's
administration's environmental polices
in explaining his reasons for choosing
Salazar.
“I want a more proactive Interior
Department," the President Elect stated.
"I also want an Interior Department
that, very frankly, cleans up its act.
There have been too many problems and
too much -- too much emphasis on
big-time lobbyists in Washington and not
enough emphasis on what's good for the
American people, and that's going to
change under Ken Salazar.”
Obama hailed Salazar as a “champion for
farmers, ranchers, and rural
communities” that will “bring to the
Department of Interior an abiding
commitment to this land we love.” He
also affirmed that "that tribal nations
have a voice in this administration"
with the appointment of Salazar.
In accepting the nomination today,
Salazar vowed to promote clean energy,
protect the country's public lands and
national parks, restore the nation's
rivers and work with Native American
communities.
“I look forward to helping build our
clean energy economy, modernize our
interstate electrical grid, and ensure
that we are making wise use of our
conventional natural resources,
including coal, oil, and natural gas,"
said Salazar. “I look forward to
protecting our national parks, public
lands and open spaces, and America’s
farm and ranchlands. I look forward to
restoring our Nation’s rivers and
working to resolve our water supply
challenges. I look forward to helping to
address the challenges faced by our
Native American communities across the
Nation."
The Sierra Club, which didn't endorse
any candidate for the Interior post,
praised the nominations. Carl Pope,
Executive Director of the Sierra Club,
said he was confident that Salazar would
promote green energy policies and "undo
the damage" of the Bush years.
"The Sierra Club is very pleased with
the nomination of Ken Salazar to head
the Interior Department," said Carl
Pope, Executive Director of the Sierra
Club. "As a Westerner and a rancher, he
understands the value of our public
lands, parks, and wildlife and has been
a vocal critic of the Bush
Administration's reckless efforts to
sell-off our public lands to Big Oil and
other special interests. Senator Salazar
has been a leader in protecting places
like the Roan Plateau and he has stood
up against the Bush's administration's
dangerous rush to develop oil shale in
Colorado and across the West.
"Senator Salazar has also been a leading
voice in calling for the development of
the West's vast solar, wind, and
geothermal resources. He will make sure
that we create the good-paying green
jobs that will fuel our economic
recovery without harming the public
lands he will be charged with
protecting.
"Senator Salazar will inherit an agency
that has suffered from a pervasive rot
under the Bush administration due to
widespread corruption, simple
incompetence, and severe underfunding.
We are confident that Senator Salazar
will work with President-Elect Obama to
undo the damage of the Bush years and
chart a course that will allow this vast
agency to return to its proud legacy of
protecting our last wild places,
wildlife, and vast natural resources."
On the other hand, the Tucson-based
Center for Biological Diversity strongly
opposes Salazar's nomination. "The
Department of the Interior desperately
needs a strong, forward looking,
reform-minded Secretary," said Kieran
Suckling, the organization's executive
director. "Unfortunately, Ken Salazar is
not that man."
Suckling criticized Salazar for
endorsing George Bush's selection of
Gale Norton as Secretary of Interior,
the very woman who initiated and
encouraged the scandals that have rocked
the Department of Interior. "Virtually
all of the misdeeds described in
yesterday's Inspector General expose
occurred during the tenure of the person
Ken Salazar advocated for the position
he is now seeking," stated Suckling.
"While Salazar has promoted some good
environmental actions and fought against
off-road vehicle abuse, his overall
record is decidedly mixed, and is
especially weak in the arenas most
important to the next Secretary of the
Interior: protecting scientific
integrity, combating global warming,
reforming energy development and
protecting endangered species,"
according to Suckling.
Regarding Vilsack, Pope said, "The
Sierra Club congratulates Governor
Vilsack on his appointment to head the
Department of Agriculture. We look
forward to working with him in this new
role. With a Secretary Vilsack
overseeing the National Forest System
and the Conservation Reserve Program, we
are optimistic that USDA can once again
become a responsible steward of
wilderness and vital habitat for
wildlife.
"Governor Vilsack can play an important
role in helping to bring about the clean
energy economy in a way that benefits
both farmers and rural communities and
our environment," added Pope."The USDA
can take the lead in moving us past the
corn-based ethanol of today toward the
next-generation biofuels of tomorrow.
These next-generation biofuels will not
just provide farmers with new sources of
income and help us break our dangerous
dependence on oil, but they will also
help President-Elect Obama achieve his
ambitious plans to tackle global
warming."
Here is Salazar's nomination acceptance
statement:
U.S. Senator Ken Salazar
Member: Finance, Agriculture, Energy,
Ethics and Aging Committees
For Immediate Release
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
CONTACT:Michael Amodeo – 303-455-7600
Matt Lee-Ashley – 202-224-5852
Sen. Salazar
Accepts Nomination to Lead Interior
Department