Morning Wire - Drill, Mine, Build: Inside Trump’s Energy Revolution
Episode Date: May 3, 2025Daily Wire Senior Editor Cabot Phillips sits down with Interior Secretary Doug Burgum to discuss cutting bureaucratic waste, reviving domestic mining, and restoring U.S. energy independence. Get the f...acts first on Morning Wire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Look, Air Canada
F.A. Canada,
a sold
Worldial.
Super,
an offer for
the assort.
Station Thermal,
Volcan.
Parlant of Volcan.
You've seen
the price for
Japan?
Mepargue and sushi.
Wow,
the sold
are good for
Mayork also.
We could
go to the
and do you
to go to
the beach
in Sicil.
Mmm,
I'd
adore the canolie.
Attain,
there's another
RECDiv
this sold
is a Newry
Limited,
reserved to
RKanada.com
or to
your agent
of voyage.
The conditions
can't
President Trump vowed to make America energy independent and reduce our reliance on foreign oil, gas, and minerals.
And the man tasked with making that plan a reality is Interior Secretary Doug Bergam.
Daily Wire senior editor Cabot Phillips spent the day with Bergam, who touched on everything from energy independence to illegal immigration and the renaming of the Gulf of Mexico.
In this episode, we bring you that full interview.
I'm Daily Wire executive editor John Bickley with Georgia Howl. It's Saturday.
May 3rd, and this is a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
All right, we're now joined by Doug Bergam, Secretary of the Interior.
Mr. Secretary, thanks for being here.
Cabot, wonderful to be with you.
Thanks.
And it's so fun to be in studio here with you as well.
This is awesome.
We were up in Mammoth Cave earlier,
spulunking, doing some cave diving.
Yeah, literally, I couldn't really recognize you
because the first time I've seen you outside of a cave.
Yeah, that's why we look so pale
because we weren't getting any natural light.
For our audience, who might not be aware,
What does the Interior Department encompass?
Walk us through your role there.
Well, it's an incredible department because of the scope and the breadth that it has.
It covers 14 time zones.
One way to think about the Department of Interior is the Department of Everything.
Or another way to think about it is really the heart of America's balance sheet.
There's 500 million acres of land, 700 million acres of subsurface, 2.5 billion of offshore.
And it covers from the U.S. Virgin Islands to America in Samoa.
It's got in some states more than 50% of the lands in those states are public lands.
So think Bureau of Land Management, think U.S. National Parks, think Bureau of Indian Affairs
where we hold land and trust for over 500 tribes, think about U.S. fish and wildlife.
All of these resources combined plus the offshore represent really an enormous amount of wealth
that belongs to the American people.
Now, I want to talk about some of your efforts on mining.
You've described the war on mining that's been taking place in this country under the last administration.
China recently halted the export of a number of rare earth minerals.
You're now pushing to make America less dependent on China and to open up America's mining of those minerals.
Talk to us about those efforts.
The war on mining goes along with all of the climate extremism that the left has embraced going back, you know, Obama, Biden.
You know, their whole approach was we're going to shut down mining.
We're going to shut down oil and gas.
development, we're going to shut down the use of coal, either for thermal uses like electricity
or metallurgical for making steel. We're going to shut down grazing on public lands because they
were essentially, they were also anti-lifestock as part of this thing. But they were most successful
on mining. They really, I'm going to say, crushed the mining industry, both the extraction of
these resources, but also the processing of that. China, in parallel, I'm sure we're part of that
from a, I don't say from a sci-op standpoint,
but in the same way that Russia wanted to have all of Western Europe go green
so they could become dependent on their natural gas,
China was happy to have the rest of the Western world stop mining
so that they could take control of the markets around these critical minerals,
which we need for defense, for technology, for electronics,
really for everything today in modern life depends on it.
So now in the United States we've got to get back in the game,
and under President Trump we are.
just this last week announcing that the resolution copper mine,
this is a 30-year saga to get a mine permitted for copper in the U.S.
I was not getting done.
President Trump took it on.
Three months later, we're announcing that project is beginning.
There's a capability called fast-tracking where you can speed up.
There had only been two mining operations in the U.S. history
that had ever been put on that list to accelerate their permitting.
President Trump added 10, last 10 more mining projects last week.
There's going to be dozens more in the weeks ahead that will be announced that are being added to that list.
So we're getting back in the game.
But again, the Obama-Biden and that whole approach of anti-mining has put us in a precarious situation of dependence on an adversary who's now using that as a tool in the Cold War we're in.
I think when a lot of people hear about deregulation, their eyes can kind of gloss over.
But tangibly, you're a former businessman.
what does deregulating something like the mining industry,
what does that do for efficiency and for speed,
now that more and more Americans are concerned
about the idea of being tied to a Chinese supply chain?
Well, and you say former, yes,
I spent my career in technology as a business person,
but I'm really, that's what I did as governor,
was continue to be a businessman.
And here in government, same thing,
because we've got to drive efficiency
in one of the ways that the tool that's
been used to kill all of these natural resource industries in America has been permitting.
I mean, permitting has been just drag on, drag on years, decades, then finally a permits
issue, then a lawsuit is filed, then it drags on in court. And that uncertainty has driven
the capital formation out of these industries. And it's caused actually even American companies
to say, well, if I'm going to do mining, I better do it overseas. And if you really cared about
the environment, you know, the folks that are pushing these lawsuits and funding these lawsuits,
if you cared about it, you'd want to have it all done here. You'd want to have everything mined in the
U.S., processed in the U.S. You'd want to have every electron, every barrel of oil and gas produced here.
We do it cleaner, better, safer, smarter, and healthier here in the U.S. because when we attack
these resource-based industries, we don't reduce the demand. We just shift the supply to overseas.
And they shifted to China who might be extracting this from the DRC in the middle of Africa,
and they're doing it without reclamation.
They're doing it with sometimes slave labor, prisoner labor.
I mean, they're doing it with no emissions control on what they're doing.
So it's worse for the global environment.
It helps our adversaries.
It hurts our economy, and it's horrible for national security.
So it's literally 180 degrees.
They're taking down a path.
The Obama Biden was taking us down a path.
path 180 degrees in the wrong direction. President Trump is changing that because he understands
that both peace abroad and prosperity at home is that we have to be competitive in these natural
resource industries, including the production of energy and producing critical minerals.
One of the moves you made recently on illegal immigration has been getting a lot of attention,
understandably so. Talk to us about your decision to transfer federal lands in New Mexico
along the border, over to the U.S. military, and what that will do to improve border security?
Well, this is a wonderful connection between two powerful presidents.
Theater Roosevelt in 1907 had the foresight and the wisdom to set aside what became known as
the Roosevelt Reservation, a 60-foot strip across New Mexico, Arizona, and California,
which could, at the authority of the Secretary of Interior, be transferred to the Department
of Defense, in his words of the day, to stop smuggling.
Well, what have we had? We've had human trafficking, smuggling. We've had fentanyl flowing in,
sort of mass invasion, mass casualties. Well, now we have a 60-foot strip that's been transferred to the
U.S. DoD. If someone sets foot on that, they're trespassing on a military installation.
Now the troops that President Trump, through the border emergency, has deployed down there,
they can detain someone for that trespassing until the border patrol, who's got arrest authority,
can arrest them. So this is going to help with a collaboration,
between the Border Patrol and the NRDOD.
And I was just down there last week
as part in signing the order down there
on the New Mexico border,
but I'm telling you the border patrol,
I talked to multiple people 20 plus years,
25 years in the service.
They said they've never felt more supported
in their job in doing law enforcement
than they have right now under President Trump.
Now, your administration, or your department
has recently been partnering with Doge
to find and root out inefficiency
as a businessman, were there any particularly egregious examples of waste or inefficiency that
when you took over, you said, hey, if this is one of my businesses, we would have cut this
years ago. Were there any specific examples and what are you looking towards to find cuts?
Well, the systems, the IT systems are so bad at the federal level that it is, it's really
some days absurd. And having spent my life selling business solutions,
in the tech business, software solutions,
then this is an area that I'm particularly interested.
But we come in with the basic questions
that any business could ask, you can't get answers.
I mean, you come in and say,
well, how many contracts and grants do we have
and how many people are administering them?
Hard to find out those numbers,
but then you find out that just Interior alone
was managing 36,000 contracts and grants.
And this was almost double
just during the last four years
during the Biden administration.
The amount of money that was flying out
of the federal government
between November 6th of last fall,
and January 20th of this year on a chart, on a graph,
is just, again, ridiculous.
But then you say, well, then how many people are managing that?
You have grants management in the private sector
or contract management, but the ratios sometimes are off
by a factor of five or more,
the number of HR people that may exist
in some of these departments, you know,
relative to the total number of folks.
You know, we might have one HR person
for every 30 team members at the federal government.
In the private sector,
one for 200. So it's like, you know, we could be off by five or six in terms of what I'd call
the bureaucratic overhead. And when we take a look like today, when we're out at this national
park and you meet these hardworking, dedicated people that are interfacing every day with our
citizens doing their job, they also are dealing with the bureaucracy. We had good people trying to
do the job, but they're dealing with the overhead that exists. And I think we can strip out a lot of
that overhead and it's never, it's never been cleaned out. State governments have to balance
their budget. The federal government never has. So this is like a barn that's been filled up
for a hundred years and nothing has been thrown away. And we're going in that barn and we're
taking everything out and put in the yard and then we're deciding what's going to go back in.
And the only thing that goes back in is stuff that actually adds value to the citizens.
And then it also is stuff that is purposeful work for the people that are doing it because
we don't need to be paying federal employees to be doing mind-numbing, soul-sucking, repetitive
paperwork, literally paperwork, because we don't have the systems. Those folks, you know,
there's 10 million jobs open in America. And if we can reduce the number of people working
for the federal government, which the Biden increased that a lot. I mean, you saw the jobs
report during this time. And oh, jobs are up, 200,000, well, 150,000 of them might have been
government jobs. And so even if we just get back to where we were when President Trump left
office would be a huge boost for the economy. And it would take a big bird.
off of the federal government reduce the cost. I mean, we can save billions and billions of dollars
in certainly in the interior, but I know in every department, every agency we can do that
just through common business sense decisions. You mentioned earlier the amount of land owned
by the federal government, and I grew up on the East Coast. I think a lot of people on the
East Coast are unaware of how much land out west in states like Nevada is controlled by the federal
government. Do you have any interest in opening up some of those federal land tracks for housing
or commercial use, things of that nature? Well, it's great that you bring up the east or west,
because we do have states in the east that have between zero and two percent that are public lands,
but you get out west. Wyoming is over 40 percent, Utah over 60 percent, Nevada, over 80 percent
of federal land. Alaska, which is the size of California plus Texas, plus Montana, plus New Mexico,
over half of Alaska, public lands.
I mean, we have so much land, these 500 million acres,
but out west, we got fast-growing metro areas
like in Las Vegas and Clark County.
You've got the whole population area in Utah
that's booming between Ogden and Salt Lake.
They're constrained by federal lands,
and there's an opportunity with land swaps.
We did one President Trump believes in using these resources widely.
We did a land swap, a couple hundred thousand acres of federal
for about the same amount of land
with the state of Utah, and then we filled in the checkerboard of some wilderness areas that we
want to protect. They got 200,000 acres of land that they can use for housing or for resource
development. And there is a special law for Southern Nevada, the Southern Nevada Lands Act,
which then gives us special authorities to help sell those lands to Nevada to help take off
the strain, because that's driving up the cost of housing. And the American dream, part of the reason
why the American dream is out of reach is because of land costs out in some of these western cities.
Biennue at board of Via Rai. Embarked and profite. Embarked and relaxe.
Ciroat. Bookine.
Oh, that also. And profite.
Via Rai, the voice that we're the chair of the National Energy Dominance Council. Formerly National Energy Council.
Now it's Energy Dominance Council. It shows the Trump priorities there.
And NEDC, it's kind of like ACDC.
We put a little lightning bolt in between there.
I think we'll have T-shirts for the NEDC.
But we already had a national economic council,
so we could have two acronyms within the White House
with the same council initials.
Just throw dominance in there.
I like it.
Exactly.
So President Trump came to office on a promise
to make America energy dominance on the global stage.
As we approach the 100-day mark,
do you think that he has done that?
Well, we're definitely on track.
And when we talk about dominance,
This is about that we sell energy to our friends and allies, so they don't have to buy it from our
adversaries.
I mean, the two wars that we're in right now that are going on that are essentially proxy wars,
one with Iran who is funding 24 terror groups.
They were funding it and still are with the sale of oil.
You know, Biden administration, the sanctions completely failed.
During the Biden administration, they sold estimated between $2 to $300 billion worth of oil and gas.
under Trump won.
He had Iran financially on their knees
because the sanctions actually weren't.
Russia, as I said earlier,
they spent 10 years co-opting everybody in Western Europe
to believe that climate extremism
was the existential threat
as opposed to the existential threat
might have been like Iran getting a nuclear weapon
or Russia with the conflict going on in Ukraine.
those are some things that were Russia then invaded.
The price of oil went up,
and Russia made more money than they've ever made.
And then, of course, we said,
and then Biden said,
we're going to sanction these guys.
Well, when they sanction them,
Iran and Russian oil went down in price.
Who was buying it all?
China.
I mean, we turned our adversaries into China's discount gas station,
and China was laughing all the way to the bank.
China's filling their strategic petroleum reserve to record levels.
Biden drained ours in half ahead of the midterms to try to manage price.
He turned the strategic petroleum reserve of the United States strategic petroleum reserve
into a political petroleum reserve back in 2022.
So the mess that was handed to President Trump, he's got to turn all of this again,
as they say, 180 degrees in the other direction.
But when he's talking about drill baby drill, he's talking about we're going to get,
we're going to permit and we're going to develop the resources.
And we're going to map baby map to figure out where all these resources are.
and then we're going to mine baby mine so we can build baby build
because we got to build AI data centers.
If we don't have electricity to power the AI right now,
China is winning, we're winning on the technology.
China's winning on electricity,
and you can turn a kilowatt of electricity in an AI data center.
You manufacture intelligence.
The country that produces the most intelligent first wins this race,
and this is not a race we can come in second place.
And he understands that.
I think Silicon Valley does.
I think that's why you're seeing all the tech leaders supporting this administration and why
you're seeing the thing.
But we've got to be able to clear the path so that we can take advantage of the huge
energy resources.
We have China imports 11.5 million barrels of oil a day.
They're the most energy-dependent country in the world.
They also have to import food every day.
So here we are a country that has food security and energy security.
but we were constraining ourselves.
We were tying both hands behind our back
with all kinds of regulations,
lawsuits, and an ideology that said,
no, we're not going to develop these resources here.
But as I said, that played right into our adversary's hands
and for a safer world than for a stronger America,
we need to get back in the game.
Final question.
You were the man that officially changed the name,
Gulf of Mexico, a Gulf of America.
do you have any more name changes coming?
Oh, I'm sure that...
I'm sure there's out there.
I'm sure there'll be some.
And that was a thrill for Catherine and I to be invited to be on Air Force One, flying over the Gulf.
Well, the proclamation was being signed.
And it did fall that the official naming committee for geographic names falls under the Department of Interior.
and it's more layered and complex than you might imagine.
But then today with all of the technology
and the mapping companies, the Google Maps, Apple Maps,
all the other folks, we were in coordination with them
as we were flying to say,
don't hit the button to restart populating
the new name of Gulf of America until it's official.
But right on schedule at 1.30 p.m.,
the pilot came on board from the 747,
the 747 Air Force One and has tipped the wing down and said,
ladies and gentlemen, look out the right side of the plane,
you're looking at the Gulf of America.
President Trump had just signed it.
The press was crammed into his little office on Air Force One,
and that was a very fun day.
But I don't know, someone was joking today that we were just at Mammoth Cave National Park,
that maybe that ought to be like huge.
The Y.
Huge cave.
If you're taking suggestions, maybe we could re-neux.
name one of the Great Lakes, the leftist tieres reservoir in honor of our mugs here. But I won't put you
on the spot for that one. Mr. Secretary, thank you so much for your time. Thank you, Cabot. Great to be with you.
And thanks to this organization, thanks to all of your listeners, the listening, and they're an important
part of helping move this country forward. And we're grateful for all their support. Amen to that.
Thank you, sir. Thank you. That was Daily Wire senior editor Cabot Phillips with Interior
Secretary Doug Bergam. And this has been a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
