Former Asst. Interior Secretary Says Downfall Of Land Sale Bill Lee’s Own Fault

Sen. Mike Lee has only himself to blame for the downfall of his plan to sell federal public lands. Former Assistant Interior Secretary Rob Wallace says Lee shot his bill in the foot when ā€œhe cut the public out of the discussion.ā€

MH
Mark Heinz

June 26, 20253 min read

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, right, has only himself to blame for the downfall of his plan to sell federal public lands. Former Assistant Interior Secretary Rob Wallace, left, says Lee shot his bill in the foot when ā€œhe cut the public out of the discussion.ā€
Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, right, has only himself to blame for the downfall of his plan to sell federal public lands. Former Assistant Interior Secretary Rob Wallace, left, says Lee shot his bill in the foot when ā€œhe cut the public out of the discussion.ā€ (Getty Images; Nature and Science via Alamy)

A proposal to sellĀ millions of acres ofĀ federal lands inĀ 11Ā Western states might have been doomed from the start because it was slipped ā€œunvettedā€ into a budget bill, said Wyoming resident and former Assistant Interior Secretary Rob Wallace.Ā 

ā€œIn a nutshell, he cut the public out of the discussion on their public lands,ā€ Wallace said of U.S. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and his controversial proposal.

Lee’s MiscalculationĀ 

Lee chairs the Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee and is facing scathing criticism after trying to insert the land sale language into the Senate’s version of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

He’s calling for the saleĀ of between 0.5% and 0.75% of Bureau of Land Management and National Forest System parcels,Ā but opponents of the plan say it opens the door to sell much more. And hunters say there’s no amount of federal public land they’d be OK with selling.

That was a gross miscalculation on Lee’s part, said Wallace, who served as assistant Interior secretary under the first administration of President Donald Trump. In that role, he oversaw the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and the National Park Service.

Instead, Lee should have submitted the measure as aĀ standaloneĀ bill before the committee and allowed open debate and public testimony before the committee, Wallace said.Ā 

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Where Things Stand

After massive backlash from sportsmen’s groups, environmental advocates and others, Lee late Monday offered toĀ significantly cut backĀ on the amount of land that could be sold under his measure.Ā 

The same day,Ā the proposal hit a procedural snag.Ā 

The Senate parliamentarian applied the ByrdĀ Rule, potentially cutting Lee’s proposal out of the One Big Beautiful BillĀ Act,Ā which is a budget reconciliation bill.Ā 

Under that rule, language in budget reconciliation bills must be focused on fiscal issues. The parliamentarian ruled that the language in Lee’s land sale proposal failed that test.Ā 

LeeĀ said heĀ still hopes to introduce aĀ revised, scaled-back planĀ and possibly gain a needed 60 approving votes on the Senate Floor.Ā 

Wallace said that a direct connection he has in Washington, D.C.,Ā told him that the matter was ā€œstill up in the air,ā€ along with other aspects of the One Big Beautiful Bill.Ā 

ā€œThis is one piece of an avalanche that the parliamentarian is trying to work through right now,ā€ Wallace said.Ā 

Some Wyoming hunters and representatives of sportsmen’s groups previously told Cowboy State Daily that they flatly oppose Lee’s proposal, no matter what, and thatĀ no revisions could make it acceptableĀ to them.Ā 

Committee Process Messy,Ā But NecessaryĀ 

Lee and supporters of his measure, including Wyoming Republican Congresswoman Harriet Hageman, said it would focus on parcels of federal land in or near communities.Ā ThoseĀ could be developed for affordable housing.Ā 

Whether such a plan could ever be feasible remains an open question, Wallace said.Ā 

HeĀ again stressed that if that was Lee’s goal, he tried going about it the wrong way.Ā 

ā€œThere may be situations around the West in which making public lands available for housing might make some sense,ā€ Wallace said. ā€œBut it has to be done in the daylight of committee hearings.

ā€œThis has to be done in the daylight, let the public speak to the merits of this.ā€

The often-raucous process of committee hearings can be time-consuming and complex,Ā but it’s the way things get done, Wallace said.Ā 

ā€œCommittee hearings are messy, they’re complicated, they’re frustrating,ā€ he said. ā€œSome people use them for good outcomes, and some people are demagogues, but you have to do it.ā€

Ā 

Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.

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MH

Mark Heinz

Outdoors Reporter