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Detail for 2001 Senate Roll Call Vote 6

Vote Date
30-Jan-2001
Yeas : Nays
75 : 24

Our Congress Position Report shows how every member voted during this vote.

Information about the vote from special interest groups and other information providers in our Report Cards:

Sierra Club

Nomination of Gale Norton for Interior Secretary.

The U.S. Senate voted on the nomination of Gale Norton for Interior Secretary. Gale Norton has favored allowing polluters to regulate themselves; as an attorney she sued the EPA to overturn clean-air standards; poorly enforced environmental laws against polluting mines and others; and, in the Reagan administration, she worked to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling. The Norton nomination passed.

League of Conservation Voters

Norton Nomination.

As the nation's primary steward of federal lands, the Secretary of the Interior is responsible for enforcing the laws that protect public lands and resources. In support of that mission, the Secretary is expected to encourage scientific research, foster the sound use of energy, mineral, land, and water resources, and administer programs to conserve and protect fish and wildlife.

Environmentalists were strongly opposed to President Bush's nominee for this important position: Gale A. Norton. Norton's 20-year career as an attorney had been defined by strong opposition to the laws protecting federal lands, public resources, and wildlife. As a protégée of President Reagan’s controversial interior secretary James Watt, both at the conservative Mountain States Legal Foundation and later in the Reagan Interior Department, Norton echoed her mentor's policies and consistently sided with extractive industries in legal and policy disputes.

During her tenure as attorney general of Colorado, she had favored policies that encourage businesses to regulate themselves and had defended a state law that allows polluters to avoid legal action if they report environmental violations and pledge to avoid future violations. The EPA had criticized the Colorado law because it keeps details of company actions confidential, preventing citizens and government agencies from investigating even egregious health and environmental violations.

During her confirmation hearing, Norton moderated her rhetoric but did not repudiate her previous positions on federal lands stewardship or her past suggestions that taxpayers should compensate polluters and developers for complying with environmental laws. These and other items in her public record persuaded environmentalists that Norton, far from being an advocate for public resources, would give industry free reign to exploit America’s lands and waters.

Despite vocal opposition to her nomination from the environmental community, only two Senators—Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Charles Schumer (D-NY)—voted against it in the Energy committee. The Senate voted to confirm Norton to the post of Secretary of the Interior. Since taking office, Norton has strongly advocated drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and even misrepresented biological data to a Senate committee to support her pro-drilling arguments. She has rescinded new mining regulations designed to protect public lands from toxic pollution, responding to pressure from the mining industry. And she scuttled a plan to reintroduce grizzly bears in wilderness areas in Idaho and Montana—a plan that had the support of local conservation groups and some timber industry representatives—in part because of opposition from Idaho Governor Dirk Kempthorne.

U.S. Public Interest Research Group

Environmental Preservation/Oppose Gale Norton as Secretary of the Interior.

Gale Norton’s nomination to be the Secretary of the Interior galvanized strong opposition from the environmental community. Norton had spent most of her career opposing the laws protecting public lands, wildlife, and other resources – exactly the laws that she would be required to enforce as Secretary. In her career, Norton had worked for the radically conservative Mountain States Legal Foundation, an anti-environmental nonprofit law firm that works to undermine environmental laws that lets companies decide if they are meeting environmental requirements and argued before the Supreme Court that the Endangered Species Act was unconstitutional. These and other actions made it clear that Norton was an inappropriate choice to oversee 500 million acres of public lands. The Senate voted 75-24 to confirm Gale Norton to the post of Secretary of the Interior.

League of Private Property Voters

Norton Confirmation.

Confirmation of President Bush's nomination of Gale A. Norton to be secretary of Interior. Confirmed.

Republican Liberty Caucus (Economic Liberty)

Norton confirmation.

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