TipSheet: Watch List for Trump Federal Agency Appointments

In the coming days, President-elect Donald Trump is likely to nominate candidates for major leadership positions at federal environmental and energy agencies. As that happens, journalists can refer for background to the trove of articles (
like this one ) on the short-listed candidates.
Some of the rumored possibles are known quantities, and a few aren’t. While pre-announcement rumor-mill
stories are often speculative, they
sometimes shed light on appointments once they are made.
Here are some of the meatiest leads.
Environmental Protection Agency
Two others
reported to have met (link requires subscription) with Trump and his transition team about the administrator job at EPA (or possibly some other job) are former Texas environmental commissioner
Kathleen Hartnett White and Oklahoma Attorney General
Scott Pruitt [link updated Dec. 7, 2016].
Interior Department
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Sarah Palin speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C., Feb. 26, 2015. Photo: Gage Skidmore, Wikimedia Creative Commons |
Others
mentioned are
Mead Treadwell , a former lieutenant governor of Alaska; former Republican Rep.
Richard Pombo , who chaired the House Natural Resources Committee from 2003 to 2007; former Arizona Gov.
Jan Brewer ; Wyoming Rep.
Cynthia Lummis ; and Oklahoma oilman Harold Hamm (see Energy Department, below). Also mentioned is former Colorado Congressman
Bob Beauprez .
While the cabinet-level secretary of the Interior post matters, much of the important business at Interior is carried out at its bureaus (like the Bureau of Land Management or the National Park Service). The short lists for those key appointments (most of which face Senate confirmation) may not come into sight for a while yet.
Energy Department
Energy policy will be a battleground during the coming administration — that is not news. But Trump’s
vow to bring back coal and turn the oil spigots wide open is likely to make it more so. So far, Trump has not declared war on
renewable energy — which might be
likely to create more jobs than the fossil fuels he favors.
Others have been
mentioned as well — they included North Dakota Rep.
Kevin Cramer , Robert Grady (see EPA, above) and Texas Gov. Rick Perry.
Agriculture Department
Farm policy affects the environment in a lot more ways than many people are aware. For instance, pesticides and fertilizer affect the health of people and waterways. And the Agriculture Department, remember, contains and oversees the U.S. Forest Service. The year 2017 will be an important run-up in Congress to the 2018 Farm Bill, which will have loads of environmental consequences. The
secretary of agriculture will be a key player.
Watch this space in the weeks to come for more tips on covering the incoming Trump administration.