by David Halperin, crossposted from Republicย Report
In October 2016, candidate Donald Trump unveiled a package of government ethics reforms that he said would โdrain the swampโ in Washington, DC
But Trumpโs every move since being elected has been in the opposite direction. A former coal lobbyist, Andrew Wheeler, runs the Environmental Protection Agency; an ex-pharmaceutical lobbyist, Alex Azar, runs Health and Human Services; former for-profit college lobbyists control policy at Betsy DeVosโs Department of Education; and much more. On issue after issue, from weakening protections against toxic pollution, to undermining access to health care, to giving tax advantages to the rich, the administration has sided with wealthy interests over workingย people.
This Thursday the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee will hold aย hearingย to consider Trumpโs nomination of another former industry lobbyist, David Bernhardt, to be Secretary of theย Interior.
Bernhardt, currently the Departmentโs acting secretary and deputy secretary, would replaceย Ryan Zinke, whose reign was characterized by troubling conflicts of interest, paired with an extraordinarily audacious sense of entitlement andย self-aggrandizement.
Bernhardt is less flamboyant, more skilled in the ways of law and government.ย But in terms of the ways that money corrupts politics and policy, his record is even moreย concerning.
David Bernhardt is the ultimate swampย creature.
The weekend brought the revelation,ย in aย Revealย /ย Politicoย report, that at a 2017 meeting of the Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA), Dan Naatz, the groupโs political director, was recorded telling the 100 executives gathered that then-deputy secretary Bernhardt was their boy.ย โWe know him very well,โ Naatz said, โand we have direct access to him, have conversations with him about issues ranging from federal land access to endangered species, to a lot ofย issues.โ
Naatz didnโt stop there. He predicted that Zinke would be the Interior figurehead, while Bernhardt would get things done: โWhat secretaries of Interior do is go out to Yellowstone, go out to Tetons โฆ have big vision for what theyโre going to doโฆ David is going to be the COO. Davidโs going to move the pieces. Davidโs going to be part of that, and we know himย well.โ
Barry Russell, IPAAโs CEO, bragged in the session of meeting with Zinke and with Scott Pruitt, then the EPA head. He also noted that Bernhardt, while at the powerhouse DC lobbying firm Brownstein Hyatt, had led IPAAโs legal team challenging federal endangered species rules: โThe guy that actually headed up that group is now the No. 2 at Interior. So thatโs worked outย well.โ
An Interior spokesperson told theย Revealย reporter that Bernhardt โhas had no communication or contact with either Barry Russell or Danย Naatz.โ
But thereโs no doubt that these men and other oil and mining lobbyists have gotten what they wanted out of the Trump administration, especially from their faithful servant Davidย Bernhardt.
During that 2017 meeting, IPAA circulated a โregulatory updateโ memo, listing five major environmental laws and regulations they wanted to overturn. Since then, the Trump administration has gutted four of those five targets โ measures that were aimed at (1) limiting water pollution from energy fracking; (2) reducing climate change-causing methane gas releases; (3) requiring restoration of public lands damaged by energy projects; and (4) holding energy companies accountable for harms to migratoryย birds.
An earlierย Revealย report, last month, exposed Interior Department emails showing that Bernhardt played a critical role in the 2017 decision to revoke the governmentโs 50-year authority to use the Migratory Bird Treaty Act to prosecute companies that accidentally kill migratory birds through activities like oilย drilling.
While Bernhardt is legendary for hisย skill at avoiding a paper trailย for his activities โ heย ย claims, โI have not personally maintained a calendar for yearsโ โย Revealย also hasย documentedย that Naatz and other IPAA representatives met in April 2018 with Todd Willens, Bernhardtโs top aide, to discuss the migratory birds issue, as well as the rules requiring restoration of public lands. Hours later, Willens met withย Bernhardt.
Another investigativeย piece, published in theย New York Timesย last month, revealed that, since 2017, Bernhardt has been pushing at Interior to eliminate another environmental rule, one he had long been paid to oppose as a lobbyist โ protection against destruction of a species of river fish. Bernhardt admitted to theย Timesย that four months after joining Interior, he directed a senior Department official to initiate an effort to weakening protections for the fish in order to free up water for agricultural businesses โ the same businesses Bernhardt had represented while at Brownsteinย Hyatt.
Bernhardtโs intervention in a matter he had pursued as a lobbyist appears to have violated the Trump administrationโs ethics pledge, requiring officials to refrain from such involvement for at least two years. Last month, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), along with the non-profits Campaign Legal Center andย Public Citizen,ย called for investigationsย of this potentialย violation.
Invoking aย strained and dubious interpretationย of the ethics pledge โ that Bernhardtโs actions at Interior are legal because he has worked on the broad issue of water rights, and not just the included issues affecting his ex-clients โ Bernhardt and Interior spokespersons insist that he complied, and generally assert that he has abided by all regulations governing ethics and recusal. But even if that were true, the scandal, as isย often the case, isnโt whatโs illegal; the scandal is what is still legal in swampy Washington DC.
Bernhardt epitomizes the Washington revolving door โ getting paid by taxpayers to master policy issues in government jobs, and cashing in on his experience and connections as an industry lobbyist. In 1998, he jumped from his job as an aide to a House Republican to join Brownstein Hyatt. He later entered the George W. Bush Interior Department as a top aide to Secretary Gale Norton and then as the Departmentโs chief lawyer, and he worked to overturn the congressional prohibition on oil drilling in Alaskaโs Arctic Wildlife Refuge. When the Bush administration ended, Bernhardt returned to Brownstein Hyatt, where he lobbied for or advised dozens of energy and mining companies and trade associations, like IPAA, seeking to end or avoid Interiorย regulations.
Among other work at Brownstein Hyatt, Bernhardt lobbied on behalf of EP Energy to delay protections against air pollution from coal-fired power plants. He worked for Rosemont Copper,ย which seeks to dispose of toxic waste in the Coronado National Forest in Arizona. In the aftermath of the BP Deepwater Horizon gulf oil disaster, Bernhardt lobbied to expand offshore drilling on behalf of Cobalt International Energy, a company probed by federal law enforcement agencies for violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practicesย Act.
More than 150 organizations joined aย letterย opposing Trumpโs appointment of Bernhardt as deputy secretary, charging that the nominee was โladen with conflicts of interest that raise serious questions about his ability to act in the public interest.โ (More than 160 groups signed aย new letter, released today, opposing Bernhardtโs confirmation to be secretary.) Indeed, critics have labelled Bernhardt โa walking conflict of interest,โ and as if to prove that, heย reportedly carries with him a small cardย that listsย all his potential conflicts.
While brushing aside concerns about his own conflicts, Bernhardtย chargedย last month in a letter to Interior staff that Departmentโs โethics challenges were part of a mess that we inheritedโ from the Obama administration, which he appeared to denounce for โa culture of ethics avoidanceโ and โan avalanche of ethicalย misconduct.โ
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