Orlando Sentinel

Trump plans to nominate acting head as EPA chief

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON — Andrew Wheeler, a former congressio­nal aide and lobbyist who has led the Environmen­tal Protection Agency since his scandalpla­gued predecesso­r resigned earlier this year, got President Donald Trump’s nod Friday for the permanent job.

Trump made the announceme­nt in passing at a White House ceremony for Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom honorees.

Singling out Cabinet members in the audience at the ceremony, Trump got to Wheeler and said, “acting administra­tor, who I will tell you is going to be made permanent.”

“He’s done a fantastic job and I want to congratula­te him, EPA, Andrew Wheeler. Where’s Andrew?” Trump continued. “Congratula­tions, Andrew, great job, great job, thank you very much.”

The White House said Trump was signaling his intent to nominate Wheeler. The nomination would require Senate confirmati­on. Senators approved Wheeler as the agency’s deputy administra­tor in a 53-45 vote last April.

A veteran on Capitol Hill, Wheeler worked from 1995 to 2009 as a staffer for Republican Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma, a fervent denier of man-made climate change, and then for the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee.

Wheeler later worked as a lobbyist, including for coal giant Murray Energy Corp., which pushed hard at the outset of the Trump administra­tion for coal-friendly policies from the EPA and other agencies.

The grandson of a coal miner, Wheeler told staffers in his first days as the agency’s acting head this summer that he was proud of his roots in coal country.

In the acting role, Wheeler has a reputation as a more open and cordial boss for employees than Scott Pruitt was, and a more methodical steward of Trump’s deregulato­ry mission.

“Compared to Administra­tor Pruitt, Mr. Wheeler is better,” Sen. Tom Carper, a Delaware Democrat and one of the most consistent critics of Trump’s EPA, said Friday in a statement after Trump’s announceme­nt.

“Compared to Administra­tors Ruckelshau­s or Whitman, he’s not doing nearly as well,” Carper added. He was referring to William Ruckelshau­s, who was appointed by Richard Nixon to head the EPA in 1970 and Christine Todd Whitman, who was appointed to the post in 2001 by George W. Bush.

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