Demo

On June 28, Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) announced he would withdraw his controversial proposal to sell off federal lands.

Lee cited concerns that under budget reconciliation rules, he could not guarantee lands would stay in American hands and out of reach from foreign buyers like China or corporations like BlackRock.

“While there has been a tremendous amount of misinformation—and in some cases, outright lies—about my bill, many people brought forward sincere concerns,” Lee said.

The withdrawal came after strong pushback from both sides of the aisle. Montana Republican Sen. Tim Sheehy posted:

“The entire Montana delegation has been united on this since Day One: public lands belong in public hands,” he wrote on X.

“Proud to work with @SteveDaines to block the sale of public lands. Now let’s pass the Big, Beautiful Bill so we can implement the America First agenda Montanans overwhelmingly support.”

Idaho Republican Sen. Jim Risch also weighed in. “The people of Idaho have been clear – we do NOT support the sale of our public lands to the highest bidder,” he posted. “I am proud to help lead the effort to remove this provision.”

But Lee’s core argument remains: the federal government owns far too much land, mismanaging it to the detriment of local communities.

Under Democratic leadership, these lands often become locked away, limiting hunting, development, and rural economic opportunities. Lee argued this forces higher taxes for schools and reduces funding for local services like search and rescue.

One solution that rarely gets serious traction is transferring these lands back to state management. States would keep them public but oversee them with local stewardship and use-focused management.

This would allow the federal government to shrink bloated agencies that regulate vast landscapes from Washington, D.C., while ensuring these lands aren’t sold off to private bidders.

If states manage lands, local hunters, ranchers, and outdoor users could have more input and better access. States could implement active conservation strategies without federal gridlock.

Lee closed by thanking those who provided feedback on his withdrawn provision. “Your voices helped strengthen this bill, and they will continue to shape the path forward.”

The debate now shifts from outright sale to how to keep public lands public while ensuring management works for the people who live and hunt there.

*** Buy and Sell on GunsAmerica! ***

https://gunsamerica.com/listings/search



Read the full article here

Share.
© 2025 Gun USA All Day. All Rights Reserved.