In Congress

Dems Prioritize Big Cat Legislation Inspired By ‘Tiger King’ Series Over Boosting Oil, Gas Production

  • Democrats marked up a bill regulating big cat ownership first during a hearing that didn’t include consideration of Republicans’ energy-related legislation.
  • “It shows me that their priorities aren’t the priorities of the American people,” Ranking Member Bruce Westerman told The Daily Caller News Foundation in an interview. “It’s amazing that we’ve got record high fuel prices, we’ve got water shortages in the West, we’ve got wildfires that are raging and are going to get worse and the focal piece of legislation is going to be a big cat bill based off of a Netflix series.”
  • “[The Big Cat Public Safety Act] ends an enormous amount of misery inflicted on magnificent animals who deserve better from us and it substantially reduces the likelihood that first responders will have to face down 300+ pound predators, something they are not trained to do and should not have to do,” Howard Baskin, a Big Cat Rescue board member and husband of the group’s founder Carole Baskin, told TheDCNF in an email.

Democratic leaders on the House Natural Resources Committee opted Wednesday to prioritize a bill regulating big cat ownership over legislation that would boost domestic energy production.

The panel prioritized consideration of the Big Cat Public Safety Act — a bill intended to regulate private ownership of tigers, lions, leopards and pumas — during its first full committee markup hearing since early April. The legislation was the first of 15 bills, none of which involve boosting domestic energy supplies or production, that the committee considered during the hearing.

The bill has been promoted by animal rights groups including the Humane Society of the United States, Animal Wellness Action and Big Cat Rescue, the animal sanctuary featured on the Netflix documentary series “Tiger King.” Democratic California Rep. Jared Huffman, the chairman of the panel’s Water, Oceans, and Wildlife Subcommittee, noted that the Netflix series revealed “a dark, dangerous side of keeping lions, tigers and other big cats in captivity” during the markup hearing Wednesday.

“It shows me that their priorities aren’t the priorities of the American people,” Ranking Member Bruce Westerman told The Daily Caller News Foundation in an interview. “It’s amazing that we’ve got record high fuel prices, we’ve got water shortages in the West, we’ve got wildfires that are raging and are going to get worse and the focal piece of legislation is going to be a big cat bill based off of a Netflix series.”

The American Energy Independence from Russia Act was among the pending energy-related bills the committee chose not to mark up Wednesday, according to Westerman. In March, Westerman and House Energy and Commerce Committee Ranking Member Cathy McMorris Rodgers introduced the bill which would restart the Keystone XL pipeline, boost natural gas exports and restart fossil fuel leasing on federal lands.

Westerman added that Democrats need to stop streaming TV shows and turn on “their local news broadcast” during the hearing. Westerman and committee Republicans are expected to widely oppose the legislation, an internal GOP memo obtained by TheDCNF showed.

WATCH:

“The irony about the big cat bill is it could probably be a suspension bill except they want to use this to weaponize the Lacey Act to further another political agenda,” Westerman said. “So we’ve shown them how to fix the bill and we can pass it to the committee and out of the House easily. But they refuse to listen to that.”

The Lacey Act of 1900 is a conservation bill that places restrictions on wildlife trafficking. Westerman noted that both the Lacey Act and state laws tightly restrict big cat ownership and that the bill considered Wednesday was more about garnering headlines.

“It’s an attempt for a diversion from the real issues which, again, are inflation, fuel prices, food prices, not to mention crime and a porous border,” he told TheDCNF.

Democratic Illinois Rep. Mike Quigley, a member of the Natural Resources Committee, and Republican Pennsylvania Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick reintroduced the Big Cat Public Safety Act in January 2021, shortly after the beginning of the current Congress. The House previously passed the bill 272-114 in December 2020 with 48 Republicans voting alongside the entire Democratic caucus but didn’t receive a vote in the Senate.

“The bill is endorsed by dozens of law enforcement groups and individuals including the National Sheriffs’ Association and the Fraternal Order of Police,” Howard Baskin, a Big Cat Rescue board member and husband of the group’s founder Carole Baskin, told TheDCNF in an email. “It has a total of over 300 bipartisan supporters in the House and Senate combined for very good reason.”

“It ends an enormous amount of misery inflicted on magnificent animals who deserve better from us and it substantially reduces the likelihood that first responders will have to face down 300+ pound predators, something they are not trained to do and should not have to do,” he continued.

Natural Resources Committee Chairman Raul Grijalva’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment from TheDCNF.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org

Thomas Catenacci

Share
Published by
Thomas Catenacci

Recent Posts

Democrats Thought Bragg Trial Would Sink Trump’s 2024 Campaign. Polling So Far Suggests Otherwise

While Democrats may have hoped that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s prosecution of former President…

8 hours ago

Biden’s Economic ‘Malaise’ Is Starting To Resemble Jimmy Carter’s Dismal Economy

Everything that is happening in our fractured nation today seems so worrisomely reminiscent of America’s…

8 hours ago

Scientific Report Pours Cold Water On Major Talking Point Of Climate Activists

The purveyors of climate doom will not tolerate the good news of our planet thriving…

8 hours ago

Georgia Taxpayers are Latest Victims of Electric Vehicle Gambles

Taxpayers could be on the hook if electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Rivian fails to resume…

8 hours ago

Elections Should Not be Conducted In Darkness

This week, the Public Interest Legal Foundation filed two federal lawsuits in Minnesota and Wisconsin to end these states’…

15 hours ago

Who Knew A Whistle Was A Deadly Weapon

Of the 7,309 aircraft in the U.S. commercial inventory, 3,173, or 43 percent, were manufactured…

15 hours ago