Republicans approved new House rules on Monday making it easier for lawmakers to cede federal public lands to state and local governments without accounting for the costs to taxpayers. Conservationists warn that cash-strapped cities and states could then sell off natural areas that were previously protected to private developers and extractive industries.
Passing a rules package for House business was the next step toward legislation for the Republican majority after a difficult week of wrangling to elect House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. The 55-page rules package is the result of weeks of negotiation between McCarthy and a faction of ultra-conservatives who used the GOP’s slim majority to squeeze out a number of concessions and create a painful spectacle on the House floor last week, when McCarthy was finally elected after 15 rounds of voting.
Some of the rule changes were expected, including new rules curbing McCarthy’s power and making it easier for lawmakers to demand spending cuts and […]
I too, like you, Stephan, believe that the remaining “sacred spaces” should remain intact and not opened up to fracking or other mining types of intrusion into these spaces. When we “took over” the USA, the British had drawn a line on the map of this continent which the new “invasion” shoud not pass, thus leaving the rest to the Native inhabitants (Native Americans), but we crossed that line. I believe that was more of an incentive for war than the “Tea Party” which just did not want to pay taxes to the British for a tax on tea.