Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 9
Trump Interior official acknowledges role in grazing changes benefiting family ranches
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 9

Trump Interior official acknowledges role in grazing changes benefiting family ranches

8 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · May 9
  • The admission came in a December event video, and ethics experts said the involvement could violate federal conflict-of-interest law.
  • The remarks linked the appointee directly to Interior grazing policy changes that aided ranching businesses like her family's, prompting calls for a watchdog investigation.
  • The case raises broader questions about ethics compliance in the Trump administration and whether officials helped shape policy affecting their own financial interests.
When does an official's industry expertise become a prohibitive conflict of interest in shaping public policy?
Can an ethics waiver retroactively excuse an official's potential prior conflicts of interest?