“We Love Public Lands Rally” to Be Held to Protest Proposed Public Land Sales and National Monument Reductions

SANTA FE, NM — On Monday, June 23, New Mexico Wild and its partners are inviting members of the public to join its peaceful Public Lands Rally and March through downtown Santa Fe, New Mexico. The rally will send a loud message to elected officials that New Mexicans value public lands and national monuments and oppose any attempts to sell off public lands and reduce national monument boundaries.
The rally will be held at De Vargas Park (302 W De Vargas St) at 3:30 pm MT, followed by a march to the El Dorado Hotel (309 W San Francisco St.) where Interior Secretary Doug Burgum will be speaking at the Western Governors Association Annual Meeting.
The brief speaker program will include representatives from conservation organizations, pueblos, and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) New Mexico Union. Participants are encouraged to bring signs in support of public land protection.
Parking is available at Sandoval Parking Garage (217 W Water St.), Water Street Municipal Lot (100 E Water St.), Railyard Public Parking, and the State Capitol Facility (485 Galisteo St.).
The rally comes at a critical time for public lands and waters. New Mexico and national organizations shared the following statements in response to the rally and emerging threats to New Mexico’s public lands and national monuments:
“To New Mexicans, public lands aren't some line item on a budget spreadsheet. Public lands are our lifeblood. Wild, public places and the wild things that inhabit those places are integral to the culture, traditions, and lifestyle of countless people across the West. Public lands are not just about outdoor recreation and all the health and economic benefits associated with that. These places house our identity. It's where we go to obtain our food, the firewood to heat our homes, and the solace we need to overcome the challenges of modern society. Public lands are our gym, our church and our grocery store. In short, our public lands are not for sale, they are in our DNA.”
- Jesse Deubel, Executive Director, New Mexico Wildlife Federation
“Republican attempts to sell off public lands are coming at a time when the protections for Greater Chaco are being rescinded, our national monuments are being targeted for abolishment, and national park units are on the table to be transferred to states, with no resources to manage. If you hunt, fish, camp, mountain bike, hike, or just value our public lands, know that your favorite places are at risk like never before.
These places are not merely lines on a map but critical ecological havens, sacred cultural sites, and irreplaceable natural treasures that help define our identity. Public lands are the backdrop to our state's outdoor heritage and way of life. Plans to sell off our children’s inheritance to benefit connected billionaires are a theft of historic proportions and should make all Americans ashamed and outraged.” -
- Mark Allison, Executive Director, New Mexico Wild
“Efforts to sell our public lands is an attack on the millions of people who celebrate these places every day. It's a significant step towards the dismantling of our public lands system. Our community in Southern New Mexico understands that our landscapes bring us together. These lands hold so much more than their potential for a cheap buck. They hold our stories, they are homes to essential wildlife and they improve the health of our communities. These efforts, coupled with President Trump and Secretary Burgum’s efforts to roll back protections on monuments and other areas, does not benefit any of our communities. The selling of public lands and dismantling of the system meant to safeguard our lands for generations is all being done to benefit the already wealthy. We protest today to urge Secretary Burgum to keep public lands in public hands.”
- Patrick Nolan,Executive Director, Friends of Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks
“The current Senate budget reconciliation package threatening to sell off millions of acres of public lands, combined with the administration's attacks on national monuments and the Western Arctic, is an unprecedented assault on our Western way of life and everyone's access to the outdoors. These coordinated threats will shut all of us out from our favorite outdoor places from New Mexico's Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks and Río Grande del Norte to Alaska's Western Arctic. Public lands and national monuments support local businesses, hunters, anglers, guides, and communities who depend on these landscapes economically, spiritually, and culturally. We are proud to join communities across the country in calling on Interior Secretary Burgum and Western governors who are meeting this week to let them know we're counting on them to do what's right: keep public lands in public hands."
- Romir Lahiri, Associate Program Director for Conservation Lands Foundation
“Public lands are home to places that have shaped New Mexico’s history. They are an integral part of our communities’ diverse cultures and ways of life, providing critical habitat for wildlife, and offering millions of people places to hike, hunt, fish, and experience the outdoors. Attacks on our public lands, including National Monuments, and the laws that created them, are shady attempts to rip apart the landscapes and ecosystems that safeguard clean air and water, buoy the outdoor recreation economy, and preserve a national heritage rich in culture and natural beauty.”
- Leia Barnett, Greater Gila New Mexico Advocate, WildEarth Guardians
About the Senate Budget Reconciliation Package
The Senate budget reconciliation proposal makes over 258 million acres of public lands eligible for being sold off, mandating the sale of up to 3 million acres of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and National Forest lands across the west. Local recreation areas, Wilderness Study Areas, Areas of Critical Environmental Concern, Inventoried Roadless Areas, and critical wildlife habitat, including notable big game migration corridors, could all be sold under this proposal. The following acreages by state are eligible for sale:

Additional Resources:
Public Lands Available for Sale in the Senate Reconciliation Bill (Wilderness Society)
A Rapid Assessment of the Senate’s Proposal to Sell Off Public Lands (Getches-Wilkinson Center School of Law)
What To Know About the Senate’s Public Lands Sell-Off (CAP)
A United Front Protecting Public Lands (Letter)
About the Interior Department’s National Monument Review:
On Monday, February 3, 2025, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum issued a series of secretarial orders that direct officers within the Department of the Interior to offer more parcels of public land for oil and gas leasing and revisit and potentially “revise” protections of national monuments and other public lands previously withdrawn from extractive use.
The call to review monuments (SO 3418 - Unleashing American Energy, Section 4c) asks for steps to “review and, as appropriate, revise” certain public land protections while conspicuously avoiding using the words “national monuments” and “Antiquities Act.” The process outlined by this order puts national monuments in the crosshairs and could lead to rollbacks.
According to a recent analysis from The Wilderness Society, Burgum’s secret monuments review puts 13.5 million acres of land-based national monuments under review. This includes 6.7 million acres of critical wildlife habitat for 32 endangered species, plus 1.2 million acres of big-game wildlife migration corridors. These places protect 5,000 miles of streams and rivers, plus watersheds that collectively supply drinking water to about 2.4 million people.
The Trump Administration Department of Justice recently quietly issued a legal opinion that reverses 100 years of consensus by permitting presidents to entirely revoke national monument protection.
Americans overwhelmingly support national monuments and oppose seeing them dismantled or destroyed. Fifty dense pages from the Trump Administration’s kowtowing Justice Department attempting to rewrite history will not change the overwhelming support Americans have for national monuments. Seventy-two percent of Westerners prefer public land protections over energy development. Eighty-nine percent oppose any changes to national monument protections. Last time Trump attempted to go after Americans’ national monuments, nearly 3 million Americans rose in protest.














