A coalition of 30 environmental groups on Thursday urged U.S. senators to oppose attorney Tommy Beaudreau’s nomination for deputy secretary of the Interior due to his extensive record of working on behalf of fossil fuel corporations.
“Beaudreau exemplifies the worst type of revolving-door cronyism, jumping back and forth between representing fossil fuel interests and working for the government.”
—Brett Hartl, Center for Biological Diversity
“Tommy Beaudreau simply possesses too many conflicts of interests with the fossil fuel industry and a lackluster record within the Department of the Interior during the Obama administration to serve in such a critical role managing our nation’s public lands and irreplaceable natural heritage, not to mention tackling the climate crisis that has been caused by the very industry that Mr. Beaudreau has represented for years.”
So begins a letter (pdf) addressed to members of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources and written by organizations including the Center for Biological Diversity, Food & Water Watch, Friends of the Earth, and Revolving Door Project.
According to the coalition, “Beaudreau’s financial disclosure report reveals numerous, deeply troubling conflicts of interests with the fossil fuel industry,” which “stand in stark contrast to Secretary [Deb] Haaland’s disclosure report.”
After leaving the Obama administration, where he was the first director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy and Management (BOEM) and later chief of staff to then-Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, Beaudreau became a partner in the law firm Latham & Watkins.
While there, “he represented numerous coal-mining, oil and gas, pipeline development, and mining companies including: Arch Resources, Total, Beacon Offshore Energy, Epic Midstream, Unocal Pipeline, and BHP,” the groups wrote.
“Beaudreau also appears to have done work for two Saudi Arabian companies—Red Sea Development and NEOM—the latter of which is connected to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman,” the groups added. “Reports indicate that the NEOM megacity project will result in at least 20,000 members of the Huwaitat tribe being evicted from their land.”
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