Los Angeles Times

Pruitt ally says it may be time for EPA chief to quit

Republican Sen. James Inhofe says he’s had enough of his fellow Oklahoman’s ethics problems.

- By Evan Halper evan.halper@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Even Scott Pruitt’s most loyal friends are starting to give up the fight.

The perpetual ethics problems of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief have moved some conservati­ves who were firmly in his camp to reconsider. On Wednesday, his longtime mentor and fellow Oklahoman, Republican Sen. James M. Inhofe, said he had had enough. He suggested it may be time for Pruitt to go.

In an interview with conservati­ve talk radio host Laura Ingraham, who expressed exasperati­on with Pruitt’s incessant ethics scandals — which include building himself a $43,000 private telephone booth and using his position to land his wife a job with Chick-fil-A — Inhofe said it all needed to stop.

“Every day, something new comes up,” he said. “I have taken the position that if that doesn’t stop, I am going to … be in a position where I am going to be forced to say, ‘Scott, you are not doing your job.’ … I am sending over a communicat­ion today that says we have had enough of these things.”

Ingraham pressed Inhofe further, saying Pruitt is hurting President Trump “because he has, I am sorry, bad judgment after bad judgment after bad judgment. It just doesn’t look good. If you want to drain the swamp, you’ve got to have people in it who forgo personal benefits and don’t send your aides around doing errands on the taxpayer dime. Otherwise you make everybody else look bad.”

“It hurts me to say this,” Inhofe said, “but I agree 100% with you. I have seen these things. They upset me as much as they upset you, and I think something needs to happen to change that. One of those alternativ­es would be for him to leave that job.”

Inhofe pointed out that even if Pruitt were to depart, his legacy of rolling back environmen­tal protection­s, climate denial and boosting the coal industry would endure because he would be replaced by his deputy, Andrew Wheeler, a former coal lobbyist.

“That might be a good swap,” Inhofe said.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? SCOTT PRUITT, head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, built himself a $43,000 private telephone booth and used his position to land his wife a job.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press SCOTT PRUITT, head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, built himself a $43,000 private telephone booth and used his position to land his wife a job.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States