Current:Home > NewsWhistleblower Quits with Scathing Letter Over Trump Interior Dept. Leadership -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
Whistleblower Quits with Scathing Letter Over Trump Interior Dept. Leadership
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-09 20:13:09
A senior Interior Department official announced his resignation on Wednesday, accusing the Trump administration of poor leadership, wasting taxpayer dollars and failing to address climate change.
Joel Clement’s resignation comes four months after he invoked the protections of whistleblower law for what he said was an illegal attempt by the department’s leaders to intimidate him for speaking out about climate change.
“You and President Trump have waged an all-out assault on the civil service by muzzling scientists and policy experts like myself,” Clement wrote in his resignation letter to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke. “You have disrespected the career staff of the Department by questioning their loyalty, and you have played fast and loose with government regulations to score points with your political base at the expense of American health and safety.”
In the letter, Clement listed some of the groups of Americans who are reckoning with the impacts of climate change—including families and businesses in the path of hurricanes and flooding, the fishermen and farmers coping with new realities, medical professionals working to understand new diseases—and issued a warning.
“If the Trump administration continues to try to silence experts in science, health and other fields, many more Americans, and the natural ecosystems upon which they depend, will be put at risk,” he wrote.
“Secretary Zinke: It is well known that you, Deputy Secretary David Bernhardt, and President Trump are shackled to special interests such as oil, gas, and mining,” Clement wrote. “You are unwilling to lead on climate change, and cannot be trusted with our nation’s natural resources.”
Private Jets and Wastes of Taxpayer Money
When Clement first blew the whistle, he accused the department of wasting taxpayers’ money. Clement, who had experience in science, policy and climate change, had been reassigned by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke to a position for which he said he was unqualified.
The move shifted him from director of the Interior Department’s Office of Policy Analysis, where he spoke frequently and publicly about the impacts of climate change, to a position in the accounting department. There, he had a “job title with no duties in an office that specializes in auditing and dispersing fossil fuel royalty income,” he wrote in his resignation letter.
Complaints about the Trump administration wasting taxpayer dollars gained steam in recent weeks as news broke that Zinke and other cabinet officials, including EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and recently resigned Secretary of Health and Human Services Tom Price, were using private planes paid for with public money. Politico reported that Zinke and his aides took several private or military flights, including a charter plane between Las Vegas and his hometown that cost taxpayers more than $12,000.
“Secretary Zinke, you and your fellow high-flying Cabinet officials have demonstrated over and over that you are willing to waste taxpayer dollars, but I am not,” Clement wrote in his letter of resignation.
Breaking Point: Zinke on Loyalty to Trump
After blowing the whistle, Clement told InsideClimate News that he tried to remain at his job and learn what was required for the new position. The breaking point came last week, he said, when Zinke accused one-third of the department of being disloyal to the Trump administration.
“Zinke’s comments the other day, demanding loyalty from the career staff, was just so offensive to everybody,” Clement said in an interview. “It caused me to sit and think, “I’m toiling away at something I’m not good at when I could be a voice for something that this agency is clearly not going to address.’”
He added that he felt the number of Interior Department employees who disagree with Trump and Zinke is probably much higher. “I would suggest it’s well over 90 percent,” he said, ”and it went up after those comments.”
Before his reassignment, Clement’s work involved the intersection of climate change and public lands, and he was responsible for coordinating federal, state and local efforts to relocate Alaskan communities that are threatened by climate change.
“I’m still checking in with folks to see how things are going, and they’re saying everything is stalled out in Washington,” he said. “At the state level, everything is ongoing, but there’s just no support in Washington.” Meanwhile, the members of those communities are facing continued threats from erosion and the thawing of permafrost.
Investigations into Zinke Shifting Scientists
Clement’s whistleblowing spurred two investigations into Zinke’s actions in the department: one by the Office of Special Counsel and one by the Interior Department’s Office of the Inspector General, which was called for by eight senators the day after Clement came forward. Both investigations are ongoing.
Clement said he’s not sure what he’ll do next, though made it clear that, while he’s resigning, he’s not going away. “I have a lot of contacts in and outside the agency,” he said. “I’d like to use those to keep the pressure on the Trump administration.”
veryGood! (23)
Related
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- FBI releases age-processed photos of Leo Burt, Wisconsin campus bomber wanted for 53 years
- Businessman Mohamed Al-Fayed, Father of Princess Diana's Partner Dodi Fayed, Dead at 94
- Sister Wives Previews Heated Argument That Led to Janelle and Kody Brown's Breakup
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Scientists Find Success With New Direct Ocean Carbon Capture Technology
- Still reeling from flooding, some in Vermont say something better must come out of losing everything
- Man convicted of 4-month-old son’s 1997 death dies on Alabama death row
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Suspected robbers stop a van in Colorado and open fire; all 8 in van hurt in crash getting away
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Proud Boys members Dominic Pezzola and Ethan Nordean sentenced in Jan. 6 case
- ACC votes to expand to 18 schools, adding Stanford, California, SMU
- USA survives tough test and rallies to beat Montenegro at FIBA World Cup
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Dick Vitale finishes radiation for vocal cord cancer, awaits further testing
- Q&A: From Coal to Prisons in Eastern Kentucky, and the Struggle for a ‘Just Transition’
- Carlee Russell’s Ex-Boyfriend Thomar Latrell Simmons Gives Tell-All on Abduction Hoax
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Billionaires want to build a new city in rural California. They must convince voters first
New Jersey gas tax to increase by about a penny per gallon starting Oct. 1
Children hit hardest by the pandemic are now the big kids at school. Many still need reading help
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
What's open on Labor Day? Target, Walmart, Starbucks, McDonald's open; Costco closed
Employers added 187,000 jobs in August, unemployment jumps to 3.8%
Delaware man who police blocked from warning of speed trap wins $50K judgment