Lodi News-Sentinel

Haaland is first Native American cabinet official in U.S. history

- Chris Sommerfeld­t

Deb Haaland, a Democratic congresswo­man from New Mexico, won Senate confirmati­on Monday to lead President Biden’s Interior Department, making her the first Native American cabinet official in history.

Haaland, whose historic nomination drew opposition from Republican­s who claim she espouses extreme views on public land use and fossil fuels, clinched confirmati­on to become Interior secretary in a 51-40 vote. Only four Republican­s, Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Susan Collins of Maine, and Dan Sullivan and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, joined 47 Democrats in voting for Haaland.

Before the vote, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) hailed Haaland’s confirmati­on as “a gigantic step forward.”

“Because Native Americans were for far too long neglected in the cabinet level and in so many other places,” Schumer said on the Senate floor.

As Interior secretary, Haaland will be tasked with overseeing nearly 500 million acres of federal lands across the country, including regulating drilling and other fossil fuel activities on them.

Shortly after taking office, Biden announced an immediate freeze on the issuance of all gas and oil drilling contracts on federal lands.

However, Biden’s order stopped short of halting previously awarded contracts, and climate changeskep­tical Republican­s sought to press Haaland to keep it that way while grilling her during her confirmati­on hearing last month.

Haaland, a progressiv­e Democrat who supports the wide-ranging “Green New Deal” proposal to combat climate change, sought to assuage the GOP concerns by noting that she would as Interior secretary carry out Biden’s agenda, not her own.

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