Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Understanding the President’s Cabinet: Interior Secretary
Understanding the President’s Cabinet: Interior Secretary
Feb 11, 2026 8:45 AM

Note: This is the ninth in a weekly series of explanatory posts on the officials and agencies included in the President’s Cabinet. See the series introductionhere.

Cabinet position: Secretary of the Interior

Department: U.S. Department of the Interior

Current Secretary: Ryan Zinke

Succession:The Interior Secretary is eighth in the presidential line of succession.

Department Mission:“The Department of the Interior protects and manages the Nation’s natural resources and cultural heritage; provides scientific and other information about those resources; and honors its trust responsibilities or mitments to American Indians, Alaska Natives, and affiliated munities.” (Source)

Department Budget:$13.4 billion (FY 2017)

Number of employees:Approximately 70,000.

Primary Duties of the Secretary:The Secretary of the Interior leads an agency with more than 70,000 employees and 280,000 volunteers who are stewards for 20 percent of the nation’s lands, including national parks, monuments, wildlife refuges and other public lands. The department oversees the responsible development of conventional and renewable energy supplies on public lands and waters; is the largest supplier and manager of water in the 17 Western states; and upholds trust responsibilities to the 567 federally recognized American Indian tribes and Alaska Natives. The Secretary also serves on and appoints the private citizens on the National Park Foundation board.

Secretary Info

Secretary: Ryan Zinke

Previous occupation: U.S. Representative for Montana’s at-large congressional district.

Education: B.S. in geology from University of Oregon; M.B.A. from National University; and M.S. in global leadership from the University of San Diego.

Previous government experience: Along with being a U.S. Representative, Zinke served as a member of the Montana Senate.

Religious Affiliation: Lutheran

Notable achievements:

• Co-author of American Commander: Serving a Country Worth Fighting For and Training the Brave Soldiers Who Lead the Way.

• Served as a U.S. Navy SEAL from 1985 to 2008, retiring at the rank mander. He was also the first former SEAL to be elected to the U.S. House and the first to be appointed as a cabinet secretary.

• Awarded two Bronze Stars for meritorious service in bat zone

• Is an adopted member of the Assiniboine Sioux Tribe at the Fort Peck Reservation in Northeast Montana.

Notable quotes:

On selling government land: “The federal government needs to do a much better job of managing our resources, but the sale or transfer of our land is an extreme proposal, and I won’t tolerate it.”

Previous and ing posts in this series:Secretary of State,Secretary of the Treasury, Secretary of Education, Secretary of Labor, Secretary of Defense, Attorney General, Secretary of the Interior, Secretary of Agriculture, Secretary of Commerce, Secretary of Health and Human Services, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Secretary of Transportation, Secretary of Energy, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Secretary of Homeland Security

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Key Injunction Won In HHS Case
The Catholic Dioceses of Pittsburgh and Erie, along with several nonprofit groups, have won a preliminary injunction against implementing the HHS mandate. U.S. District Judge Arthur J. Schwab granted an injunction in favor of these organizations. The injunction allows them to continue to offer insurance that doesn’t include contraception, sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs while litigation continues. Without the injunction, the insurance administrators for the organizations — though not the dioceses themselves — would have had to start providing the coverage...
‘Get Your Hands Dirty’: The Importance of a Rightly Ordered Life
At the Values & Capitalism blog, Jacqueline Otto Isaacs reviews Jordan Ballor’s Get Your Hands Dirty. Isaacs explains how Ballor articulates a vision for the proper orientation for our lives: In his recent release, “Get Your Hands Dirty,” Jordan Ballor of the Acton Institute lays out a clear case for why Christians ought to have rightly ordered lives and what that might look like. While the book took shape around a collection of essays, this message was as hard to...
‘Tea Party Catholic’ Now Available as an eBook
Samuel Gregg’s latest, Tea Party Catholic, is now available for the Kindle. You can buy this version through Amazon, or if you prefer the paper version, visit Robert P George, professor of jurisprudence at Princeton University says, “The book is as carefully and, indeed, rigorously argued as it is provocatively titled. It is a great resource for anyone—Catholic or not—who wants to know what the Church really teaches about the moral requirements of the socio-economic and political orders.” If you...
How to Help the Working Poor on Thanksgiving
Want to help the working poor this Christmas season? Nicole Gelinas has a free-market suggestion: Don’t shop on Thanksgiving. More than half a decade on, we’re still missing 976,000 jobs — and we’re missing 12 million jobs if you figure that jobs should grow as the population grows. But it’s one thing to be economically afraid. It’s another to be cut off from fully celebrating America’s all-race, all-religion family holiday because you and your fellow Americans are fearful economically. That’s...
‘Catching Fire’ and the Call to Freedom
Last weekend the second film based on the immensely popular Hunger Games series of books, Catching Fire, opened in theaters. One interesting way to view the world of Panem, Suzanne Collins’ totalitarian society that serves as the setting for the drama, is as a synthesis of George Orwell’s 1984 and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. In Catching Fire, Collins suggests that whether a tyranny exercises its dominion through pleasure or oppression, under the right circumstances conscience will inevitably spur some...
Noah-Adam: First Part of Kuyper’s ‘Common Grace’ Now Available
Christian’s Library Press has released the first in itsseries of English translations of Abraham Kuyper’s most famous work, Common Grace, a three-volume work of practical public theology. This release, Noah-Adam, is the first of three parts in Volume 1: The Historical Section. Common Grace (De gemeene gratie) was originally published in 1901-1905 while Kuyper was prime minister. This new translation is for modern Christians who want to know more about their proper role in public life and the vastness of...
The End of Urban Ministry
Derick Scudder, senior pastor at Bethel Chapel Church, an evangelical congregation in the northern part of Philadelphia, pleted a 4-part series explaining why he is “done with urban ministry.” Bethel Chapel is a “Bible-teaching church focused on the Good News that Jesus died on the cross for our sins. We are a racially diverse, multi-generational group of people who want to know Jesus better.” As a pastor of a church deeply embedded in a challenging section of Philadelphia, Scudder has...
Imagination And Virtue
Anne got her best friend, Diana, drunk. Sick-drunk. Neither was old enough to drink, and Anne didn’t really mean to, but…there it was. Diana’s mother was horrified, and forbade the friendship to go on. Anne was crushed. She really had made a mistake: what she thought was a cordial was wine. It was a hard lesson. If you ever read Anne of Green Gables, you know this story. Things get set aright – partly by the adults, and partly by...
Hope Is a Burning Thing
Tomorrow I’ll be offering up a more mentary on the second movie of the Hunger Games trilogy, “Catching Fire.” Until then, you can read Dylan Pahman’s engagement on the theme of tyranny, as well as that of Alissa Wilkinson over at CT. I’ll be critiquing Wilkinson’s perspective in my own review tomorrow. I think her analysis starts off strong, but she ends up getting distracted by, well, the distractions. But mend her piece to your review, and in the meantime...
Evangelicalism, Large Cities, and the ‘Other’ Christians
One of the profound realities of theology and ecclesiastical enclaves in which American Christians live is each tribal subculture views the world as if Christianity begins and ends with their tribe. Evangelicals are a great example of this trend. Some evangelicals write as if they are the only Christians doing God’s work in the world. For example, Joy Allmond recently wrote a perplexing article about New York City asking “Is New York City on the Brink of a Great Awakening?”...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved