There's been much recent discussion of the need -- and Ken Salazar's failure so far -- to clean Bush appointees out of the Interior Department. Things are famously very bad at the Minerals Management Service (MMS), but a former Cato Institute "scholar" laboring in obscurity high up in the central administration is in a position to do similar damage.
Details after the jump:
The mole is Indur Goklany and, as his personal publications page shows, his views are no secret. While at Interior he's continued to publish extensively through various wingnut outlets, and just last week was a prominent participant in the Heartland Institute's climate conference (aka Denial-a-palooza 2010).
Climate change denial seems to be Goklany's specialty, and given the vast scope of his duties (see below) it seems inescapable that he would have major input into every significant climate policy decision made by Interior. (He takes the common "respectable" wingnut thinktank view of climate change, which is to agree it's happening but then to come up with various reasons why nothing should be done about it.)
Goklany appears to have been hired at Interior in 2003, following a two-year stint at the American Enterprise Institute (the Cato gig was earlier), and today occupies a key role at the heart of Interior -- head of the Program Coordination section of the Office of Policy Analysis. His title is a mouthful, even for fedspeak: "Assistant Director of Programs and Science & Technology Policy."
He also appears to have a great deal of power. According to this Interior page, the Office of Policy Analysis:
... supports the Secretary, Assistant Secretaries, and bureaus in addressing complex and pressing policy issues, especially those of a cross-cutting and multi-stakeholder nature. The office provides policy officials with a bureau-neutral source of analysis, information, and experience that helps to analyze and define alternatives for effective decision making. This broad-scale, interdisciplinary approach informs top managers in reaching decisions on policies, programs, legislation, and resource allocation. Our staff has analytic expertise in the full spectrum of issues faced by the Department.
In so doing, its goals are to:
Provide the Office of the Secretary with expertise to coordinate issues and policies.
Aid policy officials in managing a department comprised of diverse agencies that have varied viewpoints. We strive to promote a coherent departmental voice and balance Administrative and Departmental perspectives with competing priorities of the bureaus and their constituents.
Provide top managers with an independent perspective on multifaceted and cross-jurisdictional issues which are steadily increasing.
Goklany's own Program Coordination section is described this way:
A major function of the Office of Policy Analysis is to provide program coordination when a bureau-neutral voice is called for in Interior policy development, program implementation, or program review. We receive such assignments from the Secretariat. Our staff is experienced and proactive in identifying and collaboratively solving multi-stakeholder issues.
We provide staff time and expertise to broad-reaching Interior programs that involve many stakeholders both within and outside Interior, and issues that have broad-reaching implications for Interior's operations. An example of such an issue is the the Adaptive Management Working Group (see below and the Recreational Fee Program. We also provide guidance to the Interior bureaus regarding the information collection requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act, and are responsible for Departmental review and clearance of all surveys, forms, and regulations of the bureaus that require information from the public. (emphasis added)
In other words, Goklany has his fingers in practically everything of importance that Interior does.
So what in the world is he still doing there, and how many others like him has Salazar allowed to remain at Interior?
Excuse me for shouting.