Houston Chronicle

GOP senator chose history over oil and gas

- By Darryl Fears

WASHINGTON — Rep. Deb Haaland’s bid to become the first Native American interior secretary was made more likely Thursday by an unlikely Republican supporter, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of oil-rich Alaska, who said she still had serious reservatio­ns about Haaland’s past opposition to drilling.

Murkowski was the only Republican on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources committee to approve Haaland in the narrow 11-9 vote. Haaland’s nomination now moves to the full Senate, where the entire Democratic caucus and two Republican­s, Murkowski and Susan Collins of Maine, are expected to back her, cementing her confirmati­on.

The committee vote easily could have been a tie that would have complicate­d Haaland’s nomination. Her opposition to new leases for drilling oil and gas on federal land made her a target for Republican­s on the committee.

For weeks, Murkowski felt tugged by both history and lobbying from the oil and gas industry.

“So, I have really struggled through this one,” Murkowski said at one point in a 6-minute statement. “How to reconcile a historic nomination with my concerns about an individual’s and an administra­tion’s conception of what Alaska’s future should be.”

Murkowski said Alaskans were extraordin­arily proud of Haaland but that they were also concerned about the New Mexico Democrat’s

“opposition to resource developmen­t on public lands, including her opposition to key projects in Alaska and her questionin­g of the vital role that Alaska Native Corporatio­ns serve in our communitie­s.”

Watching Murkowski’s presentati­on live stream on the committee’s website, Crystal EchoHawk, a Haaland supporter, was certain the senator was going the vote no. “That’s what it sounded like,” EchoHawk said. “We had been hearing before the vote that Sen. Murkowski would vote yes, but I was holding my breath during her remarks thinking that something had changed.”

Murkowski spoke after Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., an ardent supporter of oil and gas developmen­t whose remarks against Haaland’s positions were cutting and strong.

“I, along with other Western senators, have consistent­ly opposed nominees who hold such radical views,” Barrasso said. He listed them: support of the Green New Deal, opposition to lifting protection­s for grizzly bears, and opposition to the Keystone oil pipeline.

Barrasso accused Haaland of giving vague answers to pointed questions from Republican­s about the oil industry and jobs. “Haaland’s extreme policy views,” he said, “and lack of substantiv­e answers . . . to me disqualify her for the job.”

Murkowski is an ally of Barrasso, but she also hails from a state where Alaskan Natives are about 20% of the population. “We are a very diverse state,” Murkowski said. “We’ve got many, many indigenous peoples and cultures who have lived here, as they say, since time immemorial.”

Alaskan Natives came out in waves to support Murkowski in her last election, holding up Vote Murkowski signs in bitterly cold weather.

They were also firmly behind Haaland, and they made that clear to Murkowski, who put aside her doubts about the Biden administra­tion’s agenda.

“I have decided to support this nomination today, to support the first Native American who would hold this position, and with the expectatio­n that Representa­tive Haaland will be true to her word not just on matters relating to Native peoples, but also responsibl­e resource developmen­t and every other issue,” Murkowski said.

“I am going to place my trust in Representa­tive Haaland and her team, despite some very real misgivings,” she said.

Judith Le Blanc, executive director of the Native Organizers Alliance, applauded Murkowski. “I think Sen. Murkowski acted with an understand­ing of the history and current significan­ce of having someone like Deb Haaland lead the Department of Interior,” she said.

The oil and gas industry knows it still has a supporter in Murkowski, Le Blanc said. “The oil industry is playing the long game,” she said. “They know Murkowski has a role in deciding the direction of drilling in the Arctic. She lives to fight another day in ensuring the oil industry will get their way.”

 ?? Jonathan Newton / Washington Post ?? Rep. Deb Haaland’s nomination for interior secretary now moves to the full Senate.
Jonathan Newton / Washington Post Rep. Deb Haaland’s nomination for interior secretary now moves to the full Senate.

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