Captain Jean Luc Picard looks on in frustration as Vice President Mike Pence and Interior Secretary David Bernhardt hold a political rally in front of Yellowstone's Old Faithful geyser in May. Note the absence of any mask wearing in the crowd.
Captain Jean Luc Picard looks on in frustration as Vice President Mike Pence and Interior Secretary David Bernhardt hold a political rally in front of Yellowstone's Old Faithful geyser in May. Note the absence of any mask wearing in the crowd. (Photo: NPS / Jacob W. Frank)
Indefinitely Wild

Inside the DOI’s Embarrassing Ethics Fight on Twitter

A lesson for the Department of the Interior staff: you can’t delete official tweets

Captain Jean Luc Picard looks on in frustration as Vice President Mike Pence and Interior Secretary David Bernhardt hold a political rally in front of Yellowstone's Old Faithful geyser in May. Note the absence of any mask wearing in the crowd.
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Earlier this week, the Department of the Interior released a campaign video it put together for President Trump. It is a federal crime for government employees or agencies to participate in political campaigns in an official capacity, according to the Hatch Act. When Twitter users pointed this out, the department’s deputy press secretary responded in a measured, mature way that demonstrated the level of respect he and his colleagues have for the American people:

As a recap, the Department of the Interior is run by David Bernhardt, a former oil lobbyist who, as a personal hobby, has conducted a two-decade-long war on the polar bear species. He’s continued to work in the interest of his lobbying clients while in office, prompting ethics investigations that began on the fourth day of his tenure. Those came after the former secretary of the interior, Ryan Zinke, was forced to resign due to multiple ongoing corruption scandals. Bernhardt was Zinke’s deputy. Those investigations into Bernhardt have gone nowhere, becuase they’re overseen by the department’s corrupt solicitor, Daniel Jorjani, a lawyer for the Koch brothers who has been blocking the release of virtually all DOI records to the public. I could go on, but you get the idea. 

As Tim Fullerton notes, the deputy press secretary’s response has drawn a lot of attention. It also ended up highlighting a tweet from investigative journalist Adam Federman. 

As Aaron Weiss, a public lands advocate, points out, this looks like a violation of the Hatch Act all on its own. This could provide more evidence in a possible criminal investigation into corrupt practices at the department, or lead to its own charges. 

In short, this is a pretty good lesson in how social media works for the DOI press team. For more trolling, tune in to the entire thread.

Lead Photo: NPS / Jacob W. Frank

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