Update: Following fierce criticism of Tuft鈥檚 appointment, Department of the Interior officials announced Thursday that she will not be appointed Inspector General or moved to DOI to fill any position. 鈥淢s. Tufts is not employed by the Department and no decision was ever made to move her to Interior,鈥 DOI Press Secretary Heather Swift said in a statement.
The Center for Western Priorities, a frequent critic of Zinke's management, stated: “It's truly bizarre that it took Secretary Zinke's office more than a day to correct a story that they now claim is false. Either Secretary Zinke's office is not being truthful or they're just not competent enough to perform basic functions. Regardless, the Office of Inspector General is vital to a well-functioning Interior Department.”
At last count, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke was the subject of . (A new record!) But that number could soon be zero. That鈥檚 because Zinke just fired the Department of the Interior鈥檚 acting inspector general.听
The news doesn鈥檛 stop there. Not only did Mary Kendall, the acting inspector general,聽 until , but her replacement will likely be able to fill the role without needing to go through Senate confirmation.听
Kendall鈥攚ho鈥檚 served as acting聽inspector general at the DOI for ten years, and previously spent a decade as deputy inspector general鈥攊s being replaced by Suzanne Israel Tufts, a Republican lawyer who worked on the Trump campaign, and then was appointed to the role of assistant secretary of administration at the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Under the , Tufts will not need to undergo Senate confirmation to fill the new role, as she was already approved by Congress for her job at HUD.听
Tufts, who will now handle oversight of the investigations into Zinke, was appointed to HUD .听
If you think that sounds unethical, you鈥檙e not alone.听鈥淲e are particularly worried that she鈥檚 a political appointee without any obvious government oversight experience,鈥 Danielle Brian, the executive director of the non-partisan Project on Government Oversight,聽. 鈥淎nd they are sliding her in under the radar of any Senate confirmation process to take over charged investigations into the behavior of the cabinet secretary.鈥
鈥淭his reeks of retaliation for the shocking number of investigations into Secretary Zinke鈥檚 unethical conduct,鈥 Chris Saeger, the executive director of the Western Values Project, . 鈥淗e should immediately explain the reasons why the current inspector general is leaving and if he fails to, Congress should demand answers.鈥
Rep. Ra煤l Grijalva (D-Ariz), a ranking member of the House Natural Resources Committee, said the move 鈥渟tinks to high heaven.鈥 He went on : 鈥淪ecretary Zinke and the Interior Department are awash in wave after wave of scandal and corruption, and they decide now is the perfect time to get rid of the current IG. After looking around, the best person they could find is a Trump political operative at HUD who turned a blind eye to Secretary Carson鈥檚 $31,000 dining set.鈥
Meanwhile, one of the scandals surrounding Zinke聽is the $139,000 bill for new doors at his Washington office. He also for his , , a potentially illegal , and re-assigning senior DOI employees he didn鈥檛 consider 鈥.鈥
Perhaps most troubling, though, is Zinke鈥檚 pattern of putting business before the environment when it comes to decision making on public land. He ignored public comment when that the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments be shrunk (a move that benefited extractive industries), has of climate change from scientific reports commissioned by DOI, into the environmental impacts of drilling and mining, sabotaged the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and is doing away with compensatory for companies that damage the environment.
All that was with impartial oversight at DOI. What will Zinke do without it?聽