William Perry Pendley


William Perry Pendley is an American conservative activist, commentator, and government official, currently serving as the acting director of the Bureau of Land Management, an agency within the United States Department of the Interior responsible for administering public lands.
Pendley was appointed by Interior Secretary David Bernhardt as a deputy director of the Bureau of Land Management in July 2019. He was elevated to acting director less than a month afterward. Pendley is one of a number of high-ranking acting officials carrying out official duties in the Trump administration who have not been confirmed by the Senate. No BLM director has been confirmed by the Senate during Trump's presidency.

Early life and education

Pendley is a native of Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Pendley received Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees in economics and political science from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. He received a Juris Doctor from the University of Wyoming College of Law. He was a captain in the United States Marine Corps.

Career

During the Reagan administration, Pendley was a deputy interior secretary for energy and minerals under James G. Watt. Pendley was reassigned in 1984 when a federal commission faulted him, along with other high-ranking officials, in the underpricing of coal-mining leases in the Powder River Basin, the largest such federal sale in history.
Prior to joining the Department of the Interior, Pendley worked as a Legislative Assistant to former Wyoming Senator Clifford Hansen, and as Minority Counsel to the United States House Committee on Mines and Mining of the United States House Committee on Insular Affairs.
Pendley is formerly a longtime president of the Mountain States Legal Foundation, a conservative Colorado-based group that advocates for selling off federal land in the West. He has written several books opposing government regulation of Western lands.
He has "publicly sympathized with Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy," the sovereign citizen movement leader who has said to his supporters that "We definitely don't recognize jurisdiction or authority, his arresting power or policing power in any way," and in interviews used the language of that movement, thereby gaining the support of members of the Oath Keepers, the White Mountain Militia and the Praetorian Guard militias.
Pendley has sued against the Endangered Species Act of 1973, has called the science of climate change "junk science", and has written that climate change believers are "kooks". He falsely claimed in 1992 that there was no credible evidence of a hole in the ozone layer. In a July 2017 speech to conservative activists, he joked about the killing of endangered species.
Pendley has also made controversial public comments on some issues unrelated to conservation. In a 2007 fundraising letter, he wrote that illegal immigration was spreading like "a cancer". In 2017, he wrote that the Black Lives Matter movement was based on a "terrible lie" because Michael Brown had not said "Hands up, don't shoot" before he was killed by a police officer.

Trump administration

Pendley was appointed to deputy director and then acting director of the Bureau of Land Management in 2019. His role as acting director of BLM was controversial, given that Pendley had previously advocated for selling off federal lands. He said would not pursue mass land sales that he had previously campaigned for, because "the president has made it very clear that we do not believe in the wholesale transfer of federal lands". He released a list of nearly five dozen former clients, including oil, mining and agriculture interests, that he would recuse himself from decisions on for a year or two.
Opponents of Pendley's appointment include the Sierra Club; the Wilderness Society; Backcountry Hunters & Anglers; the CEO of the Patagonia clothing company; Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility; Sen. Martin Heinrich, Democrat of New Mexico; and Joe Biden, the 2020 Democratic presidential candidate. His supporters include Sen. Steve Daines, Republican of Montana.
In the Trump administration, Pendley has been overseeing the relocation of Bureau of Land Management jobs out of Washington, D.C., to Western states. Pendley said that he would prefer to relocate to Grand Junction, Colorado, but his own job was one of 61 identified as needing to be kept in Washington. Congress rejected funding for the relocations, and Rep. Raúl Grijalva of Arizona, the Democratic chair of the House Natural Resources Committee, said that Congress would investigate whether the plan was appropriate. In December 2019, Pendley wrote that nearly two-thirds of the 153 employees told to move out of Washington had agreed to relocate.
Pendley said the biggest threat to U.S. public lands is wild horses and burros "causing havoc".
On December 30, 2019, 91 groups with connections to public lands sent a letter to Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt demanding that Pendley resign or be removed from office for alleged conflict of interest. The Interior Department called the groups who signed the letter "environmental extremists." The day afterward, Bernhardt acted to extend Pendley's tenure through April 2020.
Bernardt has repeatedly issued orders extending Pendley's tenure in an acting capacity, bypassing a Senate confirmation process. In May 2020, two activist groups, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and the Western Watersheds Project, sued over Bernhardt's ongoing appointments of Pendley to run the BLM and David Vela to lead the National Park Service. In June 2020, an unwritten order by Bernhardt extended Pendley's acting appointment indefinitely.
On June 26, 2020, Trump said he planned to nominate Pendley for confirmation by the Senate, a move that CNN said might give Pendley firmer legal footing to continue on an interim basis.

Personal life

Pendley and his wife live in Evergreen, Colorado, and he also rents an apartment in Washington, D.C.