The Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice were merely the opening salvos. The Loyalists’ Doctrine—a calculated strategy to bypass the U.S. Senate’s constitutional oversight—found its most audacious and prolonged triumph at the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), an agency responsible for a staggering quarter-billion acres of America’s public lands, from pristine wilderness to resource-rich deserts.
Here, the administration deployed a new, more sophisticated weapon in its arsenal of constitutional fraud: the "delegation shell game." For over 424 days, the BLM was effectively commanded by William Perry Pendley, a vocal advocate for selling off public lands, who was installed as a "Deputy Director" but was, in practice, the "Ghost Director"—wielding immense power without ever once facing Senate scrutiny or even the pretense of a proper "Acting" appointment under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act (FVRA).
This was not a bureaucratic oversight; it was a deliberate, protracted act of administrative capture, orchestrated to push through a radical, anti-conservation agenda that would have been impossible under a Senate-confirmed leader. The BLM case exposes the full, terrifying flexibility of the Loyalists' Doctrine, proving that it can operate in plain sight, mocking the very laws designed to prevent such a takeover. The federal judiciary, once again, stepped in to confirm the extensive fraud, but not before immense damage had been inflicted upon the nation’s natural heritage.
I. THE STRATEGIC TARGET: CAPTURING AMERICA'S LANDSCAPE
The Bureau of Land Management is a federal behemoth, responsible for managing more land than the combined area of California and Texas. Its purview includes oil and gas leasing, mining, grazing, recreation, and wildlife protection. For those aligned with resource extraction industries, controlling the BLM is not merely a political victory; it is a gateway to unimaginable wealth.
This made the BLM a prime target for the Loyalists’ Doctrine. A Senate-confirmed Director, especially one with a balanced view of public land management, would face intense scrutiny from conservationists and local communities, likely slowing or stopping the radical pro-extraction agenda. The solution? Install a ghost.
William Perry Pendley: The Ideological Weapon
William Perry Pendley was not merely a political appointee; he was an ideological weapon. Before his arrival at the BLM, Pendley was a notorious figure in the conservative legal movement, having spent decades as a lawyer and activist advocating for the privatization of public lands and a dramatic reduction in federal environmental protections. He once famously claimed that the "founding fathers intended all federal land to be sold." His views were so extreme that his nomination as a confirmed Director would have been a non-starter in the Senate, guaranteeing a bruising, public confirmation battle he could not win.
This made Pendley the perfect loyalist. He possessed the radical zeal to execute the desired agenda, but lacked the public credibility to pass a Senate vote. The administration's challenge was simple: how to give him absolute power without ever putting him before Congress?
II. THE DELEGATION SHELL GAME: THE GHOST DIRECTOR'S ASCENSION
The answer was the "delegation shell game"—a sophisticated legal maneuver that outmaneuvered even the FVRA, which primarily governs acting appointments. Here, the administration exploited the inherent authority of agency heads to delegate their duties to subordinates, turning a ministerial function into a weapon of constitutional avoidance.
The Initial Setup: The FVRA Sidestep
When the BLM Director, Neil Kornze, resigned in April 2017, the administration made only temporary "acting" appointments, avoiding a permanent nominee. This immediately created a vacuum. In July 2019, William Perry Pendley was initially brought in as the Deputy Director for Policy and Programs, a position that did not require Senate confirmation.
The initial gambit was subtle:
- No FVRA Appointment: Pendley was not initially designated as "Acting Director" under the FVRA. This immediately sidestepped the Act's time limits (210 days) and the qualifications for who could serve.
- The "Succession Memo" Trick: Instead, the then-Acting Interior Secretary issued a series of "Succession Memorandums." These internal documents, often buried in bureaucratic filings, effectively delegated "all functions and duties" of the BLM Director to Pendley. This was the precise mechanism of the "shell game": Pendley held a lower-level, non-confirmable title, but possessed the full, unbridled authority of the top job.
The Constitutional Fallout: A "Matryoshka Doll of Delegated Authorities"
The administration tried to argue that this was a perfectly legal exercise of "delegated authority." However, the federal judiciary ultimately saw through the charade. This was not a routine delegation; it was a deliberate, long-term scheme to install an unconfirmed official in charge of a massive agency.
- The Lawsuit: Conservation groups, spearheaded by Montana’s Governor Steve Bullock, sued to stop Pendley, arguing that his de facto directorship was unlawful.
- The Judicial Hammer: On September 25, 2020, U.S. District Judge Brian Morris delivered a devastating ruling. He found that Pendley had been unlawfully serving for 424 days without Senate confirmation, exceeding any legitimate interpretation of a temporary appointment.
- The Scathing Rebuke: Judge Morris’s language was unsparing, directly indicting the "delegation shell game": "The President cannot shelter unconstitutional 'temporary' appointments for the duration of his presidency through a matryoshka doll of delegated authorities." This was a direct judicial validation of the Muckraking Audit’s analysis of the "delegation of duties" loophole. The court found that this was not a simple delegation but a "structural constitutional infirmity," a direct assault on the Appointments Clause itself.
Pendley was a "Ghost Director"—invisible to Senate oversight but fully empowered to wreak havoc on public lands, proving that the Loyalists’ Doctrine was adaptable enough to bypass the FVRA entirely.
III. THE POLICY OF DESTRUCTION: PLUNDERING THE AMERICAN COMMONS
The purpose of installing the Ghost Director was to rapidly push through policies that would have been impossible under a Senate-confirmed leader, prioritizing resource extraction over conservation. The BLM’s core mission was perverted, its resources reallocated, and its long-standing policies overturned.
The Drilling Frenzy
Under Pendley's unlawful command, the BLM aggressively accelerated oil and gas leasing on public lands. This involved:
- Massive Lease Sales: The agency fast-tracked lease sales across millions of acres, often in areas with significant wildlife habitat or recreational value, overriding environmental concerns and public opposition.
- Streamlined Approvals: Environmental reviews were curtailed, and permits for drilling were pushed through at an unprecedented pace, all in the service of immediate extraction.
- Dismantling Protections: Long-standing protections for endangered species, migratory birds, and cultural heritage sites were either ignored or significantly weakened in favor of industry demands.
The Headquarters Relocation: A Strategic Sabotage
One of Pendley's most controversial and disruptive actions was the relocation of the BLM headquarters from Washington D.C. to Grand Junction, Colorado.
- The Stated Purpose: The administration claimed the move would bring the agency closer to the lands it manages.
- The Real Purpose (Audited Motive): Critics, including former BLM officials, argued the move was a deliberate act of "brain drain"—forcing hundreds of experienced, career civil servants to either relocate to a remote location or retire. This effectively purged the agency of institutional memory and resistance to the pro-extraction agenda, replacing it with a more pliable, smaller workforce. This was administrative sabotage, designed to weaken the agency from within.
The Judicial Nullification: Policy as Void as the Appointment
Following Judge Morris’s ruling, a critical question arose: what happened to all the policies Pendley enacted during his 424 days of unlawful service?
- The Cloud of Illegality: The court’s decision immediately cast a deep cloud over every major policy, lease sale, and regulatory change Pendley had authorized. Like the DACA policies under Wolf, all of Pendley’s directives were now vulnerable to being voided because they flowed from an official who lacked legitimate authority.
- The Long-Term Damage: While the legal system eventually corrected the constitutional wrong, the damage to public lands was immediate and often irreversible. Oil and gas leases were already in place, pipelines were approved, and critical staff had already been forced out. The Doctrine succeeded in its goal of causing irreparable harm before the courts could intervene.
IV. THE ETHICAL PAYOUT: A REVOLVING DOOR TO THE ANTI-FEDERAL MOVEMENT
The Pendley case, more than any other, highlights the ultimate payoff of the Loyalists’ Doctrine: the rewarding of individuals who serve the political machine's agenda, particularly in dismantling federal power, with lucrative positions within the very movements dedicated to shrinking the government they once ostensibly served.
Pendley's Return: A Predictable Trajectory
William Perry Pendley’s post-government career trajectory was entirely predictable and further confirms the Tier 3 Revolving Door analysis. After being forced out of the BLM, Pendley immediately returned to the political-advocacy ecosystem. He did not seek a career in impartial land management; he sought a platform to continue his decades-long crusade against federal land ownership.
- The Anti-Federalism Paycheck: Pendley’s career, both before and after his BLM tenure, has been intrinsically linked to organizations and movements that advocate for the transfer of federal lands to state control or outright privatization. His illegal directorship at the BLM served as a powerful credential, a badge of honor for successfully advancing this agenda from within.
- The Ultimate Transaction: His appointment and subsequent actions confirmed that the "public service" offered by such loyalists is not to the nation, but to a specific, ideologically driven movement with a clear financial interest in resource extraction and deregulation. He was paid to dismantle, not to manage.
The BLM case clarifies the motive of the Loyalists’ Doctrine: it's not always about direct financial enrichment through personal deals (though that exists, as we saw in the EPA section). Often, it's about the strategic capture of agencies to achieve ideological goals that directly benefit powerful corporate and political factions, with the "reward" being continued prominence and funding within that ecosystem.
V. THE UNCHECKED POWER: THE DOCTRINE'S EVOLUTION AND CONGRESSIONAL COMPLICITY
The BLM case marks a significant evolution of the Loyalists’ Doctrine. It moved beyond simply challenging existing succession orders (as at DHS) or overriding specific statutes (as at DOJ). It demonstrated a willingness to circumvent even the FVRA entirely through the sophisticated "delegation shell game."
This highlights the alarming adaptability of the Doctrine and the inherent failures of the legislative branch to contain it. The judicial branch, in this instance, stepped in to apply the brakes, but not before 424 days of unlawful command had taken their toll on America's shared landscape.
The enduring lesson of the BLM crisis is this: Congressional inaction is complicity. While the courts can eventually declare an appointment unlawful, they cannot prevent the damage inflicted during the illegal tenure. The loopholes in the FVRA that allow for this "matryoshka doll" of delegated authorities remain, a clear invitation for the next administration to exploit. Until Congress clarifies the primacy of the Appointments Clause and explicitly closes these delegation loopholes, the Ghost Directors will continue to haunt America’s agencies, serving not the public, but the private interests that pay for their loyalty.
Our Muckraking Audit continues its relentless watch, because the price of liberty is eternal vigilance, and the price of unaccountable power is the systematic looting of the Republic.