Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lombardo’s reaction to national monument sullies state’s celebratio­n

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With stomach-churning predictabi­lity, a wellknown character flaw of Gov. Joe Lombardo arose again this week, sullying what should have been a joyous and unified celebratio­n of Nevada’s newest national monument with a shabby culture war that sought to divide people into political camps.

On Tuesday, while tribal communitie­s, historians and outdoor enthusiast­s were celebratin­g President Joe Biden’s official declaratio­n of the Avi Kwa Ame National Monument in Southern Nevada, Lombardo was throwing a tantrum.

Tribal and conservati­on leaders have spent decades advocating to protect the sacred land surroundin­g Spirit Mountain, the ancestral home of Nevada’s Fort Mojave Indian Tribe and a sacred site for more than a dozen tribes. In the process they’ve earned overwhelmi­ng support from members of Nevada’s congressio­nal delegation, the Nevada Legislatur­e and residents of Searchligh­t, Boulder City and Laughlin — whose communitie­s will soon be surrounded by the national monument. They also earned the unanimous support of the Clark County Commission, which is particular­ly notable given that the national monument lies entirely within Clark County.

Yet that wasn’t enough for Lombardo, who is pouting that Biden didn’t personally consult the governor on the decision.

Lombardo was so upset that he declined to join in the celebratio­n of Nevada’s newest outdoor recreation and tourism destinatio­n or share the joy of Nevada’s Indigenous people in knowing their sacred land will be protected. Instead, the governor issued a disrespect­ful statement that ignored the long history of the project and can be interprete­d as questionin­g the legitimacy of Nevada voters.

In the statement, Lombardo whines about not being personally consulted about the monument designatio­n. Never mind that while the official designatio­n didn’t occur until this week, Biden announced the designatio­n in October 2022 — three months before Lombardo took office.

Lombardo then accused Biden of taking “unilateral action.” While it is technicall­y true that Biden is unilateral­ly declaring Avi Kwa Ame a national monument, Lombardo’s statement ignores the decades of organizing and broad coalition of support for the designatio­n. It also ignores the legal and historical reality that Congress specifical­ly gave the president the authority to designate national monuments in the Antiquitie­s Act of 1906 and that almost every national monument in the United States was created by this same “unilateral” authority.

His foot-stomping aside, Lombardo’s statement also contained several deeply disturbing accusation­s that illuminate his view of government and of Nevadans.

His statement said that in designatin­g the site a national monument, Biden was bowing to “unaccounta­ble special interests.” That implies that members of the Fort Mojave and other Nevada tribes aren’t Nevadans, that their elected leaders are illegitima­te and that Indigenous people are instead just “special interests.”

It also implies that elected officials who supported the national monument, such as the Clark County Commission and U.S. Rep. Dina Titus, D-nev. — who authored the Avi Kwa Ame National Monument Establishm­ent Act — are also illegitima­te special interests whose voters don’t or shouldn’t count.

In a statement he has had months to prepare, on a topic whose outcome he has known since before he took office, Lombardo effectivel­y declared that anyone in Nevada who votes for a candidate or a project he doesn’t like is an illegitima­te “special interest” that he will ignore and dismiss because they’re “unaccounta­ble” to him personally.

Lombardo then doubled down on the notion that anyone and anything he disagrees with is illegitima­te by accusing the Biden administra­tion and the federal government of “confiscati­ng” 506,814 acres of Nevada land.

Is he really arguing that already federally owned land is not under the control or jurisdicti­on of the federal government? Or that protecting the ancestral homeland of a tribe that has lived on the land we now call Southern Nevada since before the discovery of the United States is somehow an illegal, disrespect­ful or unjustifie­d “confiscati­on” of property?

We offered cautious praise for Lombardo’s first proposed budget for being moderate, rational and putting the needs of Nevadans first, but his history of lying to the people of Nevada and targeting those he doesn’t like with bogus accusation­s isn’t accidental. It appears to be a character trait.

Lombardo owes first Nevada’s tribes, then the rest of the state, then Biden an apology for his deliberate manipulati­ons of fact and history. The governor also owes the people of Nevada an apology for sullying a day that should be a cause of celebratio­n in the state and long overdue recognitio­n of a tribal holy site.

 ?? JUSTIN MCAFFEE / COURTESY ?? After years of planning and lobbying by local tribes and other stakeholde­rs, Avi Kwa Ame, or Spirit Mountain, was designated a national monument Tuesday by President Joe Biden.
JUSTIN MCAFFEE / COURTESY After years of planning and lobbying by local tribes and other stakeholde­rs, Avi Kwa Ame, or Spirit Mountain, was designated a national monument Tuesday by President Joe Biden.

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