Remarks of
President-Elect Barack Obama
Departments of Agriculture and
Interior Announcement
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Chicago, Illinois
[AS PREPARED FOR DELIVERY]
Earlier this week, I announced key members of the team that
will help us seek new forms of energy to build a new economy, to
enhance our security, and to leave our children a planet that’s safer
and cleaner. Today, I am pleased to announce two other key advisors and
members of this team – Governor Tom Vilsack as Secretary of Agriculture
and Senator Ken Salazar as Secretary of the Interior. Together, they
will serve as guardians of the American landscape on which the health
of our economy and the well-being of our families so heavily depend.
One of the great blessings bestowed upon us as Americans is the
bounty of our natural environment – from the mountains and parks where
we go hiking to the rivers and streams where we go fishing to the
forests and fields where the proud tradition of hunting is passed on
through the generations. But our wide open spaces are not only a
blessing to be enjoyed, they are the foundation of a brighter future.
How we harness our natural resources – from the farmlands of Iowa to
the springs of Colorado – will speak not only to our quality of life,
but to our economic growth and our energy future.
It’s time for a new kind of leadership in Washington that’s
committed to using our lands in a responsible way to benefit all our
families. That means ensuring that even as we are promoting development
where it makes sense, we are also fulfilling our obligation to protect
our national treasures. It means ensuring that we are using our
farmlands not only to strengthen our agricultural economy, but to grow
advanced biofuels that will help make the United States energy
independent. And it means ensuring that the policies being shaped at
the Departments of Agriculture and Interior are designed to serve not
big agribusiness or Washington influence-peddlers, but family farmers
and the American people.
That is the kind of leadership embodied by Ken Salazar and Tom
Vilsack. Ken will bring to the Department of the Interior an abiding
commitment to this land we love. His family has farmed and ranched the
same land in Colorado for five generations. As a Senator from the
great state of Colorado, he has been a champion for farmers, ranchers,
and rural communities – from building a clean energy economy to setting
aside 250,000 acres of Rocky Mountain National Park as
wilderness.
Before serving in the United States Senate, Ken was Attorney
General in Colorado, where he worked on a number of land, water, and
environmental issues. As a water lawyer for a decade, Ken was also
chosen to lead Colorado’s Department of Natural Resources. In that
role, he promoted responsible water management, balanced use of our
energy resources, and built one of the most successful land
conservation efforts in the nation.
Few are better equipped to meet the energy and natural resource
challenges we face in the 21st century. Among the many
responsibilities Ken will bear as our next Secretary of the Interior is
helping ensure that we finally live up to the treaty obligations that
are owed to the First Americans. We need more than just a
government-to-government relationship; we need a nation-to-nation
relationship. And Ken and I will work together to make sure that tribal
nations have a voice in this administration.
To lead a Department of Agriculture that helps unlock the potential of
a 21st century agricultural economy, I can think of no one
better than Tom Vilsack. As Governor of one of our most abundant farm
states, he led with vision, promoting biotech to strengthen our farmers
and fostering an agricultural economy of the future that not only grows
the food we eat, but the energy we use. Tom understands that the
solution to our energy crisis will be found not in oil fields abroad
but in our farm fields here at home. That is the kind of leader I want
in my cabinet.
As our next Secretary of Agriculture, Tom will not only help
ensure that rural America has a true partner in implementing the Farm
Bill and pursuing agricultural research, but that Washington is looking
out for everyone from the small family farms that are feeding our
communities to the large farms that are feeding the world. When
President Lincoln established the Department of Agriculture nearly a
century and a half ago, he called it the “people’s department” for it
was meant to serve the interests of those who lived off the land. And I
know it will be the people’s department once more when Tom is at the
helm.
With the appointments I announced earlier this week, and those I
am announcing today, I am confident that we have the team we need to
make the rural agenda America’s agenda, to create millions of new green
jobs, to free our nation from its dependence on oil, and to help
preserve this planet for our children. In the end, that is not only our
responsibility as Americans, it is our obligation as stewards of God’s
Earth.
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