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Interior secretary to leave White House

‘Ryan has accomplish­ed much during his tenure and I want to thank him for his service to our Nation,’ the president said

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WASHINGTON: Donald Trump said on Saturday that his interior secretary will be leaving soon — the latest in a series of high-profile departures from an administra­tion beset by turnover and alleged ethical failings.

“Secretary of the Interior @Ryanzinke will be leaving the Administra­tion at the end of the year after having served for a period of almost two years,” Trump wrote on Twitter, highlighti­ng the fact that Zinke’s tenure was substantia­lly longer than that of some other former top oficials in the administra­tion.

“Ryan has accomplish­ed much during his tenure and I want to thank him for his service to our Nation,” the president said, adding that a replacemen­t would be announced next week.

The interior secretary is responsibl­e for overseeing conservati­on and mineral extraction on public land that, if stitched together, would be larger than Mexico.

But Zinke has been the target of a number of ethics investigat­ions, making him a lightning rod for complaints from Democrats, who expressed no regrets over his impending departure.

“Ryan Zinke was one of the most toxic members of the cabinet in the way he treated our environmen­t, our precious public lands, and the way he treated the govt like it was his personal honey pot,” said Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer.

“The swamp cabinet will be a little less foul without him.”

Zinke,a former montana congressma­n, was the subject of various investigat­ions linked to his real estate holdings in his home state and his actions in ofice.

Along with Trump’s irst environmen­tal protection chief Scott Pruitt -- who resigned in July amid a series of scandals over ethical lapses and lavish spending -- Zinke helped spearhead a presidenti­al push to sharply relax environmen­tal regulation­s and expand energy production. The Zinke announce- ment came just a week after another impending high-profile departure -- that of Trump’s chief of staff John Kelly -was made public.

Trump on Friday tapped Mick Mulvaney -- the director of the Ofice of Management and Budget -- to serve as chief of staff on an acting basis, setting him up to be the third person to hold the post since the president took ofice in early 2017.

A series of other top oficials have left the Trump White House, including a secretary of state, two national security advisors and an attorney general, as well as Pruitt.

Zinke is one of several members of Trump’s cabinet to come under ire over expenditur­es, including reports that his department was spending nearly $139,000 to upgrade three sets of double doors in his ofice -- a cost he later said he negotiated down to $75,000.

He had been the subject of some 15 investigat­ions, including one for allowing his wife to ride in government vehicles and another for taking a security detail with him on a vacation trip to Turkey, according to The Washington Post.

He has also faced criticism over costly US Park Police helicopter lights last year that allowed him to return to Washington for a horseback ride with Vice President Mike Pence, and several other lights on non-commercial aircraft.

Zinke, a former Navy SEAL who wore cowboy boots to the ofice and carried himself with a Western swagger, seemed to emulate Trump when under ire, lashing back rather than retreating.

Last month, when a Democratic congressma­n said it was time for new leadership at the Interior Department, Zinke suggested in a tweet that his critic had a drinking problem.

“It’s hard for him to think straight from the bottom of the bottle,” he wrote, a comment that many in Washington thought crossed a line.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? HARD TIMES: Migrants travelling in the Central American caravan hoping to reach the United States are being relocated in a warehouse to be used by migrants who were sleeping in the streets as a temporary shelter, in Tijuana, Baja California State, Mexico. A seven-year-old Guatemalan girl died of dehydratio­n and exhaustion in the custody of US border agents last week as President Donald Trump struggles to deter a tide of migrants fleeing poverty and violence in Central America — and battles with Congress for a budget to build a massive wall across much of the Us-mexico frontier.
Agence France-presse HARD TIMES: Migrants travelling in the Central American caravan hoping to reach the United States are being relocated in a warehouse to be used by migrants who were sleeping in the streets as a temporary shelter, in Tijuana, Baja California State, Mexico. A seven-year-old Guatemalan girl died of dehydratio­n and exhaustion in the custody of US border agents last week as President Donald Trump struggles to deter a tide of migrants fleeing poverty and violence in Central America — and battles with Congress for a budget to build a massive wall across much of the Us-mexico frontier.

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