Saturday, March 6, 2021

Diversity Dingbat: "The Biden Cabinet nominee who can't seem to get her math straight" by John Solomon

 Source:


Rep. Deb Haaland (D-N.M.) is one step closer to overseeing the federal agency that manages about a half-billion acres of public lands and national parks, a $12 billion-plus budget, 70,000 employees and the leases for more than 96,000 oil and gas wells that produce nearly 10% of the nation's energy and generate billions of dollars per year in federal revenues.

... the Department of the Interior wrestles routinely with budgeting and bookkeeping challenges and complex financial transactions and analysis on daunting scales.

... Haaland, who would be the first Native American Cabinet secretary if confirmed, has struggled to accurately account for even her own modest personal finances, offering Congress four different versions of how much income she earned during her last year in the private sector in 2018 before she joined Congress.

The second-term House member has also confessed to skipping her 2018 tax return, then filing it belatedly in December (2020) as her nomination was being vetted.

Depending on which version of Haaland's federal ethics reports and amended disclosures you pick, she made as much as $46,000 in income or as little as $2,250 in 2018 ...

Some Republican senators ... say they believe Haaland has provided inaccurate, incomplete or evasive answers to questions, from her finances to policy issues.

... (on) the question Haaland did not directly answer on whether the U.S. had tougher environmental standards than Russia or Nigeria.

"She wouldn't even acknowledge that the United States has higher environmental standards for oil and gas production than Russia or Nigeria," Senator Barrasso lamented.

... “President Biden has justified his ban on new oil and gas leasing on federal lands and waters," Barrasso said.

"He cited climate change.

Are you aware of any evidence that suggests that a ban on oil and gas leasing on federal lands and waters is going to reduce the world's total production of oil and gas?"

"No, Sir," Haaland answered.

Sen. James Risch (R-Idaho) went on a Twitter rant after Haaland offered six different non-answers to his question on whether she opposed shutting down the Keystone pipeline.

"It should not take the @Interior nominee SIX times to answer whether she supports shutting down the #KeystoneXL Pipeline & why," Risch tweeted, posting the clip of Haaland's answers.

... Haaland belatedly filed a tax return last December (2020) for calendar year 2018 without getting an extension.

... "I filed my 2018 federal income tax return in December 2020 without an extension.


In 2018, my income was $2,250," she wrote in a supplemental answer filed on Feb. 12 after  Barrasso pressed for more information.

The $2,250 income figure she provided for 2018 in the supplemental answer is different than the various totals she reported in her congressional ethics forms and subsequent amendments.

Initially, when Haaland filed her first financial disclosure report as a member of Congress on May 13, 2019, she reported her only source of income in 2018 was $30,550 earned as an independent contractor for her tribe's Laguna Development Corp. She listed no liabilities on the form.

But on Jan. 5 of this year, as her nomination was being forwarded to the Senate, she filed an amendment to the 2019 form adding $16,000 in "salary" from the San Felipe Casino, a gambling outlet near Santa Fe run by the San Felipe Pueblo.

The casino recently changed its name to Black Mesa Casino.

The amendment also listed student loan debts of between $15,001 and $50,000 that were not on her original 2019 form.

Then last week, Haaland again amended her 2019 financial disclosure report, eliminating the $16,000 in salary in 2018 from the San Felipe Casino and reducing the amount she claimed she was paid by the Laguna Development Corp. to $2,250 from $30,550 while adding $1,641 in income from a previously unlisted "John Hancock retirement distribution."

That report put her 2018 income at $3,891, or less than a third of the federal  poverty level for an individual in 2018.

(but)
the Senate panel endorsed her nomination Thursday by an 11-9 margin, sending it to the full Senate.

Haaland ... did not offer a fuller explanation for why her 2018 income estimates have kept changing as her nomination advances.

... "I respectfully inform the Committee that I requested an IRS compliance review and was subsequently informed by the IRS that I may not have had a federal tax filing obligation in 2018 based on my reported income," she wrote Barrasso."