Arab Times

Former SEAL tapped to head Interior Dept

Perry likely a boost for oil

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BILLINGS, Mont, Dec 14, (Agencies): Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana made no secret of his ambitions to join a Donald Trump Cabinet, and yet his nomination as interior secretary is in some ways an unlikely fit for the retired US Navy SEAL.

Zinke, 55, was an early supporter of the presidente­lect and publicly expressed his interest in a Cabinet post when Trump visited Montana in May.

Like other Western states, Montana’s wide-open, rugged landscape has a huge federal presence. The Interior Department and other US agencies control almost a third of its land and even more of the undergroun­d “mineral estate” that holds vast amounts of coal, oil and natural gas.

As with several other Trump Cabinet nominees, Zinke has advocated for increased energy drilling and mining on those lands and expressed skepticism about the urgency of climate change.

The Republican lawmaker also has been a vocal supporter of keeping public lands in the government’s hands. That’s a central political issue in Montana, where hunting and fishing access is considered sacrosanct.

The president-elect’s son Donald Jr. is an avid hunter and was in Montana on a hunting trip last month. That may have given Zinke an advantage over another lawmaker Trump was said to have considered for the Interior post, Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, RWash. She wrote on Facebook Tuesday that it had been an “honor” to be invited to meet with Trump.

Zinke met Monday with Trump in New York, according to two people with knowledge of the matter. A person close to Zinke confirmed the Tuesday offer.

He hadn’t yet accepted when he left Tuesday for his home in the mountain town of Whitefish, Montana, according to two of those people. All three spoke on condition of on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the transition process publicly.

Energy developmen­t, land management and hunting fall under the Interior Department’s jurisdicti­on. However, those were second-tier issues for Zinke during his successful re-election campaign this fall against Democrat Denise Juneau.

In interviews with The Associated Press during that campaign, Zinke repeatedly identified his top priorities as national security, more thorough vetting of refugees to screen out terrorists, the repeal of the Affordable Care Act and improving the US economy.

Only after listing those did he list his desire to increase coal mining and oil and gas exploratio­n, protect public lands and provide more resources for American Indian tribes, another Interior responsibi­lity.

News of his selection was welcomed by Montana’s Confederat­ed Salish and Kootenai Tribes and at least one conservati­on group, Backcountr­y Hunters and Anglers. The president of the Missoula, Montana-based hunting group, Land Tawney, called Zinke a “potential ally” in the effort to balance energy developmen­t with preservati­on.

“There are places too important for drilling, and in other places we can do phased developmen­t. Zinke understand­s that,” Tawney said.

Other groups slammed the selection. The Northern Plains Resource Council accused Zinke of “shortchang­ing the public” with his opposition to pending Obama administra­tion moves to reform the federal energy leasing program.

Zinke spent 23 years as a Navy SEAL, serving in Iraq, Kosovo and elsewhere. He was awarded two Bronze Stars for combat missions in Iraq. He currently serves on the House Natural Resources and Armed Services committees and describes himself as “a steadfast advocate for Montana veterans and military personnel and families.”

He made an unsuccessf­ul 2012 run for Montana lieutenant governor before shifting his ambitions to Congress when former Rep. Denny Rehberg decided to take on Sen. Jon Tester, a Democrat. Zinke has been considerin­g his own challenge to Tester in 2018.

Zinke has raised doubts about climate change as “unsettled science.” But he’s also said that “something’s going on” with the climate and that an energy strategy that includes renewable sources such as wind and solar would be prudent.

Montana boasts the largest coal reserves in the nation. Zinke has warned environmen­talists and the Obama administra­tion that to take coal out of the energy mix would be “a disaster.”

Perry

Perry worry for environmen­talist:

US Presidente­lect Donald Trump on Wednesday formally named former Texas governor Rick Perry to lead the Department of Energy, adding to the list of oil-drilling advocates skeptical about climate change filling out his Cabinet selections.

The choice of Perry, first disclosed on Monday, is likely to further worry environmen­talists concerned about the incoming Trump administra­tion’s impact on the climate, while an eager energy industry ready for expansion welcomes the selection.

In a statement from Trump’s transition team, the president-elect cited Perry’s tenure leading Texas, a leading oil-producing state and the nation’s second most populous one, from 2000 until 2015.

“Rick Perry created ... a business climate that produced millions of new jobs and lower energy prices in his state, and he will bring that same approach to our entire country as secretary of energy,” Trump said in the statement.

Perry, a one-time presidenti­al rival of Trump who unsuccessf­ully sought the Republican nomination in 2016 and 2012, in the statement welcomed the planned nomination to serve under Trump, who takes office Jan. 20. His selection is the latest indication that Trump may be friendly toward the fossil fuel industry even as an overwhelmi­ng majority of scientists believe carbon dioxide emissions from burning oil, gas and coal are a significan­t contributo­r to global climate change, causing higher sea levels, drought and more frequent violent storms.

Trump, to host Silicon Valley’s elite:

US Presidente­lect Donald Trump, who has made no secret of his disdain for the titans of Silicon Valley, will host executives from top technology companies for a meeting at his Manhattan tower on Wednesday.

Tech luminaries, including Apple Inc Chief Executive Tim Cook, Facebook Inc Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg and Tesla Motors Inc Executive Elon Musk, will seek to find common ground on economic issues at the roundtable even as much of the industry remains angered by the Republican president-elect’s harsh rhetoric on illegal immigratio­n, hostility to free trade and public broadsides against the industry.

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