There's a lot to love about growing up in Montana, but one of my fondest childhood memories was with my dad and brother on opening weekend of rifle season. We'd be out of the house before the sun came up, every pair of socks we owned were on our feet, and our pockets were stuffed with boloney sandwiches. I would study each trail and track like the Bulldogs playbook, and I was positive every scrape on a tree meant a monster bull elk was lurking just out of sight.
When I retired from the Navy and Lola and I moved the kids back to the Flathead that was one of the first things I did with the boys. I passed down their Montana birthright. Opening weekend is a tradition passed on from generation to generation that can only continue if we maintain public access to public lands and if we are good stewards of the land and wildlife.
America’s hunters are our best tool for conservation, and policy needs to reflect that. I’m proud that the majority of the bills I've introduced in Congress and orders I signed as Secretary promote stewardship and sportsmanship. As Secretary of the Interior, I on over 1 million acres, including Montana’s .
I conducted a of the Interior's national monuments, and after reviewing input, I found opportunities to expand hunting and fishing on millions more acres of public lands. I also for migration corridors, partnering with western states to improve big-game winter range and expand hunting and fishing opportunities on another two million acres. In fact the program was so successful the Biden Administration tried to rebrand it as their own! Upon returning to Congress last year, I introduced bipartisan to promote public-private partnerships to protect and expand migration corridors of big game, including deer, elk, pronghorn, wild sheep, and moose which built on the program I created as Secretary.
I also introduced the bipartisan prohibiting the sale or transfer of most USFS and Interior lands as part of its , with exceptions for things like land swaps to increase access to “land-locked” parcels of prime recreation lands. This would ensure nearly 30 million acres of Montana’s public lands remain accessible for hunting. It’s also critical that our Second Amendment rights and access to ammunition remain intact.
I successfully attached a rider in the 2023 and 2024 funding bills to prohibit the Biden administration from banning lead ammunition or tackle on federal lands. And I have stood against the administration’s attempts to implement so-called “red flag laws” which allow the government to seize your hunting rifles. In contrast, my opponent Monica Tranel’s record should be a warning sign to Montana sportsmen and women.
In addition to supporting a , she is a radical environmental lawyer who will hand our public lands to her environmentalist clients and fundraisers. Tranel and supports using federal lands to get there - particularly turning Montana’s leading conservation groups like and have come out against these proposals because when solar cells come in, public access is locked out. This isn’t the only way the radical left looks to lock out hunters and shooters.
Just last month, the of public lands, and Monica Tranel has been silent. If she is elected to Congress, she will kneel to the anti-hunting and anti-gun lobby the same way she kneels to her solar clients. Public access to public lands is our heritage and birthright.
Since returning to Congress, I’ve carried the baton and built on that critical conservation work. If Montanans choose to send me back as their representative, they can trust me to do the same. If you believe our heritage is worth fighting for, I’d sure appreciate your vote.
Happy hunting, Montana..
Politics
Passing down our Montana birthright | Rep. Ryan Zinke
If Monica Tranel is elected to Congress, she will kneel to the anti-hunting and anti-gun lobby the same way she kneels to her solar clients.