CLF Statement on Senate Parliamanetarian Ruling Ousting Public Land Sales from Reconciliation Bill

Washington, DC - On Monday night, Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled that Senator Mike Lee’s (R-Utah) proposal requiring the sale of up to 1.8 million acres of Bureau of Land Management lands in the Senate amendment to the One Big Beautiful Act was ruled out of the reconciliation package because it violates the “Byrd Rule.”
Below is a statement from David Feinman, Vice President of Government Affairs of the Conservation Lands Foundation, which represents a national network of community advocates who are solely focused on the public lands overseen by the Bureau of Land Management, including the 38 million acres of National Conservation Lands.
“Conservation Lands Foundation applauds the decision by the Senate Parliamentarian to remove Senator Mike Lee’s misguided, ill-intended, and deeply unpopular provision to sell off public lands as part of the reconciliation package.
“While this decision is based on a technical legislative process, it reflects the views of an overwhelming majority of Americans across the country and political spectrum that America’s public lands are not for sale, and that they should not be used to finance tax cuts for the wealthy or to line the pockets of billionaires who seek to profit from these priceless lands and waters.
“We urge Senator Lee to abandon this effort, and call on Congress to act on behalf of 
the rights of all Americans to enjoy their access to public lands by rejecting any additional attempts to mandate the sale of millions of acres of public land and line the pockets of campaign donors and out-of-state special interests. Public lands must remain in public hands for everyone to enjoy, not just the greedy few.”














