Biden to nominate Rep. Deb Haaland to head Interior Department
Biden is expected to name Rep. Deb Haaland his nominee for interior secretary, according to sources familiar with his plans -- a historic move that would make her the first Native American to lead the department managing public lands and relations with the country's Indigenous people.
A member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe, Haaland, if confirmed, would lead an agency that manages roughly 450 million acres of public land in the United States -- including national parks and wildlife habitats -- along with education and health programs for the 574 federally recognized tribes. She marks another historic pick in Biden's Cabinet he has touted as "full of firsts."

She would also play a major role in implementing Biden's climate agenda -- and carrying out his pledge to limit new oil and gas drilling on public lands.
Haaland is the third House Democrat to join the Biden administration, which will leave the party's already thin House majority even slimmer in the opening months of the Biden administration.
Democrats currently hold 222 seats in the House, with two races still outstanding, and would hold just 219 seats when Haaland, Reps. Cedric Richmond and Marcia Fudge leave Congress.
Still, House Democratic leaders publicly signaled this week that they had no objections to Haaland's selection, with Speaker Nancy Pelosi supporting the pick in a statement on Wednesday.
Progressives and indigenous groups applauded the news of Haaland's selection Thursday.
"With the historic appointment of Deb Haaland as Interior Secretary, Joe Biden chose the most qualified person and put a true movement progressive in his Cabinet. We're thrilled that Deb will fight alongside Janet Yellen, Xavier Becerra, and others for the ambitious policy priorities that Biden campaigned on," Stephanie Taylor of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee said in a statement.

Hilary C. Tompkins, who served under President Barack Obama as the first Native American to hold the position of solicitor in the department, called the decision "historic."
"Rep. Haaland will bring her wisdom, lived experiences as a Native woman, and great leadership to Interior for the betterment of our public lands and waters, the trust relationship, and wildlife protection," Tompkins said.
Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., the chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, told ABC News that Haaland will bring an "outside perspective" to the Interior Department, and dismissed early GOP criticism based on her support for the Green New Deal and other progressive proposals.
"Some senators can saber-rattle, but she’s going to get confirmed," he said. "It's difficult to stand in front of history and try to stop it."
-ABC News' Benjamin Siegel and Molly Nagle









