What Do Immigrants Owe Us?
This Is What Democracy Looks Like and Why Our Founding Fathers Didn’t Create...
What’s It Like Not to Have a Conscience? Ask Whoopi Goldberg and People...
You Don't Get It, Do You?
On CNN, Democrat 'Election Deniers' Get a Pass
The Same Crisis Wearing Different Clothes
Our Politicians Hate Us
Rolling Terror: Rogue States’ Bogus CDLs Are Killing Americans
No Billionaires? How Much Inequality Is Too Much?
Pass the SAVE Act Now to SAVE America—or at Least Give Us a...
Shadow War on Our Streets: Iranian Terror Reaches From the Gulf to Britain
The Supreme Court's Springtime Reckoning
This Isn’t a Purge. It’s Long Overdue Accountability.
Pennsylvania Woman Accused of Selling Pandemic Unemployment Approvals to Ineligible Claima...
New York Times Podcast Calls Shoplifting 'Political Protest' and Defends the Killing of...
Tipsheet

Indian Tribe: Biden Just 'Attacked' Our Sovereignty

Indian Tribe: Biden Just 'Attacked' Our Sovereignty
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, Pool

The Ute Indian Tribe, the second largest Indian reservation in the United States, sent a letter to Acting Secretary of the Interior Scott de la Vega about President Joe Biden's executive order that put a 60-day moratorium on permits relating to onshore and offshore oil and gas development. Those permits also include drilling.

Advertisement

According to the Tribe's Chairman, Luke Duncan, the executive order will have a harmful impact on his people. He is asking for the Department of the Interior to make an exemption to the order, allowing for permits to take place on tribal lands.

"Your order is a direct attack on our economy, sovereignty, and our right to self-determination," Duncan wrote. "Indian lands are not federal public lands. Any actions on our lands and interests can only be taken after effective tribal consultation."

Duncan called on de la Vega to either completely withdraw the executive order or amend it so tribal sovereignty laws are respected.

Advertisement

Last year, Congress passed the Great American Outdoors Act, which reallocates fees from drilling on Bureau of Land Management lands to the National Parks Service and National Forest Service. The money is used for maintaining those parks and forests. According to the Colorado Sun, BLM currently has 26.3 million acres under lease to oil and gas producers. 

Not having new permits threatens conservation efforts across the country.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement