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The animal kingdom will have lost one of its staunchest defenders when the Oval Office is abandoned by Barack Obama, who through a series of critical, administra­tive rulemaking­s has done more to protect animals than any other president in recent memory.

This will be especially devastatin­g if Donald Trump replaces him —not only because of his sons’ lust for hunting exotic game, but also because his recently announced agricultur­e advisory committee includes several active opponents of animal protection policies.

By now, many will have seen the photos circulatin­g on social media of Eric Trump and Donald Jr. displaying their trophy kills. One shows the two young men posed with a leopard they killed in Africa. Another shows Junior holding the tail of an elephant, which he appears to have just sliced off with the knife in his other hand, and another of him lounging against the lifeless hulk of a Cape buffalo bull. A fourth photo shows the brothers’ smiling faces framed between the horns of a magnificen­t waterbuck.

If these snapshots were intended to capture the rapture of proud manhood, they missed their mark. Trump’s spawn aren’t Maasai warriors, suffice it to say. But even the Maasai have stopped killing lions to prove themselves, thanks to conservati­onists, and now determine leadership according to who jumps highest — evidence that one can easily jump a rival’s fence when raiding cows.

When asked about his sons’ bloody hobby, Trump demurred except to say his sons are excellent marksmen. Trump prefers golf, he said, and he obviously limits trophy collecting to women. Junior, meanwhile, says he’d like to head the Department of the Interior, which, among other things, oversees trophy hunting imports. Under Obama, elephant trophies from Tanzania and Zimbabwe were halted and African lions were listed as threatened. What would a trophy-hunting Trump do with such protection­s?

Meanwhile, the Republican nominee’s anti-animal animus may be gleaned from his choice of agricultur­e advisers, which the Humane Society Legislativ­e Fund has called a “rogues gallery” of anti-animal welfare activists. (Disclaimer: My son works for the Humane Society.)

Foremost is Forrest Lucas, billionair­e founder of Protect the Harvest, an organizati­on focused on fighting the Humane Society and opposing any legislatio­n aimed at restrictin­g cruel animal practices in the production of meat, dairy and eggs.

But such humane propositio­ns are viewed by Lucas’ group as unnecessar­ily restrictiv­e to business, limiting our freedoms and attacking our all-tooAmerica­n culture. Among the “traditions” the harvest group has sought to protect are circuses, illustrate­d on the organizati­on’s website with a photo of elephants absurdly parading in a conga line on their hind legs. Thanks to animal activists and enlightene­d spectators, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey recently retired its elephants from the ring to the lasting deprivatio­n of no one.

Lucas and Co. have also opposed efforts to establish felony-level penalties for malicious cruelty against dogs, cats and horses, even fighting standards for dogs in commercial puppy mills.

Also on the committee is Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, who has the distinctio­n of being the first governor to sign into law an “ag-gag” measure that punishes whistleblo­wers, giving factory farmers free rein over animal welfare and worker safety. The bill’s sponsor, former Iowa state representa­tive Annette Sweeney, is also a Trump adviser.

Another adviser, former Nebraska governor Dave Heineman, vetoed a bill to end the sport hunting of mountain lions and has defended factory farming practices that many happy omnivores find reprehensi­ble, including the use of battery cages and gestation crates.

Adviser and Iowa factory farmer Bruce Rastetter is reported to be a leading candidate to become Trump’s agricultur­e secretary. His brother is CEO of a company that builds largescale hog facilities as well as gestation crates for breeding sows. Trump’s leaning — animal welfare or business profits — doesn’t seem to be in question.

Let’s just say his selection of advisers, coupled with a cavalier attitude toward his sons’ big-game hunting, bodes ill for animals and the protection­s so many Americans find both reasonable and desirable.

I guess it’s all in how you define freedom. Personally, I’d like to see how high these merciless profitwarr­iors and trophy hunters can jump — not as a prelude to leadership but rather to the ever-popular flying leap.

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