Los Angeles Times

Interior chief and GOP panel escalate feud with Patagonia

Dispute centers on Trump move to shrink national monuments.

- Associated press

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and House Republican­s have escalated their feud with Patagonia after the outdoor retailer told Americans that President Trump “stole your land” in his move to shrink two sprawling Utah national monuments.

The dispute pitting the GOP against a private company raised questions about use of taxpayer resources for political criticism and whether Republican­s are trying to curtail Patagonia sales weeks before the Christmas holiday.

On the day of Trump’s announceme­nt about the monuments last week, the California-based retailer replaced its usual home page with a black screen and stark message: “The President Stole Your Land.” Patagonia filed a suit to block the planned reduction to Utah’s Bears Ears National Monument.

In a tweet, the House Natural Resources Committee said Patagonia is “lying ” and making the allegation about Trump’s plan “to sell more products to wealthy elitist urban dwellers from New York to San Francisco.”

The GOP-led panel also sent out a widely distribute­d email with the subject line: “Patagonia: don’t buy it.”

A committee spokesman said Monday that the email was not urging a boycott of Patagonia but rather telling consumers, “Don’t buy the lies” about Trump’s plan.

“We’re just telling Patagonia: Stop selling a false narrative,” said Parish Braden, a spokesman for the committee.

Patagonia’s lawsuit, filed in conjunctio­n with a rock climbing advocacy group and other organizati­ons, is among a flurry of lawsuits that have been filed over Trump’s move to reduce the size of Bears Ears by nearly 85% and cut in half the land protected in Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.

The company said it spent years supporting groups creating other national monuments and directly lobbied for protection­s at Bears Ears.

Zinke accused Patagonia of lying about Trump’s actions and retweeted the committee post on his official account.

In response, former government ethics chief Walter Shaub launched a tweet storm, saying Zinke “misused his official position by re-tweeting this wildly inappropri­ate tweet.”

The committee may have violated House rules against advertisin­g for or against a private individual, firm or corporatio­n, Shaub said.

“The federal govt officially and publicly calling a company a liar for political reasons is a bizarre and dangerous departure from civic norms. It’s also decidedly anti-free market,” he tweeted.

The confrontat­ion could be paying off for Patagonia. Teresa Courage, a former Utah resident who now lives in New York, said on the company’s Facebook page that she did all her Christmas shopping at Patagonia because of its politics.

“It speaks to me about its integrity,” she told the Associated Press.

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