Leaked Audio Exposes Oil & Gas Execs
Laughing With Joy Over Cozy Access to Trump Officials
A
newly-leaked audio recording reveals that oil and gas executives in a private
meeting were "giddy" with laughter in the summer of 2017 as they
rejoiced over the "unprecedented access" they were being given to the
highest levels of the Trump administration.
They boasted about their ability to have closed-door meetings with top officials and the ascendancy of their own industry colleagues to some of the most powerful seats of government.
They boasted about their ability to have closed-door meetings with top officials and the ascendancy of their own industry colleagues to some of the most powerful seats of government.
Among
the topics in the recording, reports Reveal at the Center for Investigative Reporting—which was
provided the audio—the oil and gas executives who belong to the Independent
Petroleum Association of America (IPAA) "are heard discussing David
Bernhardt, now deputy secretary of the Interior and a former industry
lobbyist."
Notably, Bernhardt—described by the executives in the recording
as a close friend and industry operative—has now been picked by President
Trump to be the next Secretary of Interior.
Lance Williams, a senior reporter for Reveal, detailed the contents of the recorded June 2017 meeting, which took place inside a Ritz-Carlton hotel conference room in Southern California, with an extensive piece for Politico's weekend magazine published Saturday.
Williams said the "recording gives a rare look behind the curtain of an influential oil industry lobbying group" congratulating itself on their political fortunes under a friendly administration.
Williams
reports:
Dan
Naatz, the association's political director, told the conference room audience
of about 100 executives that Bernhardt’s new role meant their priorities would
be heard at the highest levels of Interior.
"We
know him very well, and we have direct access to him, have conversations with
him about issues ranging from federal land access to endangered species, to a
lot of issues," Naatz said, according to an hour-long recording...
To
a room full of laughter, IPAA's CEO Barry Russell in the recording described
one meeting with Scott Pruitt, the president's EPA administrator at the time.
What was expected to be a simple meet-and-greet, Russell explained, quickly became a friendly opportunity for the fellow industry insiders to provide Pruitt with a wish list for deregulation and agency rule changes.
"What was really great is there was about four or five EPA staffers there, who were all like, 'Write that down, write that down,' all the way through this," Russell stated. "And when we left, I said that was just our overview."
What was expected to be a simple meet-and-greet, Russell explained, quickly became a friendly opportunity for the fellow industry insiders to provide Pruitt with a wish list for deregulation and agency rule changes.
"What was really great is there was about four or five EPA staffers there, who were all like, 'Write that down, write that down,' all the way through this," Russell stated. "And when we left, I said that was just our overview."
Russell,
with the room reportedly still laughing, subsequently bragged: "It's
really a new world for us and very, very helpful."
Specifically,
the IPAA and other allies were holding meetings during that period with the
Interior Department, the EPA, and other agencies to reduce regulations on
fracking, public lands restoration, methane restrictions, and species
protection.
From Politico:
From Politico:
At
the meeting, the association's leaders distributed a private "regulatory
update" memo that detailed environmental laws and rules that it hoped to
blunt or overturn. The group ultimately got its way on four of the five
high-profile issues that topped its wish list.
Trump
himself was a driving force behind
deregulating the energy industry, ordering the government in 2017 to weed out
federal rules "that unnecessarily encumber energy production." In
a 2017 order, Zinke called
for his deputy secretary—Bernhardt—to make sure the department complied with
Trump's regulatory rollbacks.
The
leaked recording comes in the wake of reporting by journalist Andrew Perez
of Maplight revealed that Bernhardt and the lobbying
firm he once worked for, Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, have donated
almost a million dollars over the last five years to the very senators who will
soon vote on his confirmation.
A
MapLight review of campaign finance data found that Bernhardt, Brownstein Hyatt
employees and the firm’s political action committee contributed more than
$225,000 to members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee
between 2013 and 2018.
The
firm and its employees also donated more than $960,000 to current members of
the Senate, who will cast the final vote on Bernhardt’s confirmation.
Colorado's
senators, Democrat Michael Bennet and Republican Cory Gardner, were the top
recipients of cash from Brownstein Hyatt, which has a major lobbying presence
in Denver. The third-biggest haul went to Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky. Bennet voted to confirm Bernhardt as deputy secretary but
has announced he will oppose his nomination
to lead the agency.
Asked
to comment on the audio recording of the IPAA meeting, Nada Culver, senior
counsel for the Wilderness Society, told Politico that the lobby group's access ultimately resulted in
attaining much of what it wanted from the Trump administration.
"The IPAA's wish list was granted as asked, in the executive order, and in the actions taken by the Department of the Interior," Culver said. "It pains me to say it."
"The IPAA's wish list was granted as asked, in the executive order, and in the actions taken by the Department of the Interior," Culver said. "It pains me to say it."
With
Bernhardt's confirmation hearing set for next week, environmental groups are rallying
constituents to call their senators to reject the nominee.
As
Anne Hawke of the NRDC told her group's members this week, "Bernhardt's
sorry record in protecting America’s natural resources, wildlife and waters
makes him uniquely unfit for the job, and we urge you to call on lawmakers to
reject his nomination."
President
Trump, the Hawke further warned, "is handing over the future of our public
lands, wildlife, waters and all they support to a man who has made a living for
decades attacking all of that to benefit some of the biggest industrial
polluters on the planet."