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Press Releases

LCV Launches Digital Ad Campaign Criticizing Sens. Manchin and Portman for Voting to Gut the Law that First Protected Half of our National Parks

Feb 11, 2016

View the Senator Joe Manchin ads here and here.
View the Senator Rob Portman ads here and here.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The League of Conservation Voters (LCV) today launched a $20,000 Facebook ad campaign holding Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Rob Portman (R-OH) accountable for voting in favor of Sen. Mike Lee’s (R-UT) amendment to S. 2012, the Energy Policy Modernization Act of 2015, which would essentially gut the Antiquities Act. The Antiquities Act was the law first used to protect half of our national parks and has been used by 16 presidents from both parties to protect America’s special places from the Statue of Liberty to the Grand Canyon. The ads target their constituents and will run for about one week.

“Politicians who vote to gut the law first used to protect half our national parks are not pro-parks,” said Gene Karpinski, President of the League of Conservation Voters. “As we celebrate the National Park Service’s Centennial year, it is incomprehensible that these senators support tearing down the very law that ensured we could quickly protect our country’s special places for future generations. When they vote to undermine proven and successful conservation laws, it’s communities across the country that suffer when they are denied the economic benefits of preserving their natural and cultural heritage.”

On February 2, Senator Mike Lee offered an amendment to S. 2012, the Energy Policy Modernization Act of 2015, which would gut the Antiquities Act, the law first used to protect half of our national parks. The Antiquities Act has been used by 16 presidents of both parties to protect many of America’s most special places, from the Statue of Liberty to the Grand Canyon to the Pacific Remote Islands in Hawaii. The Senate rejected the Lee amendment by a bipartisan vote of 47-48 (Senate Roll Call Vote 10). Sens. Manchin and Portman both voted YEA.

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