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Posted: 2017-10-05T15:25:34Z | Updated: 2017-10-05T15:25:34Z

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has good reason to worry about loyalty and respect among his staff, says a scientist-turned-whistleblower who resigned from his agency post Wednesday citing Zinkes poor leadership and resume of failure.

During a speech to an oil industry group last week, Zinke said: I got 30 percent of the crew thats not loyal to the flag . The former Montana congressmans comment was met with outrage, including from a trio of groups representing retired Interior employees , which called the remarks ludicrous and deeply insulting.

Joel Clement who blew the whistle on the Trump administration in July, alleging that he was reassigned for warning about the dangers of climate change to Alaska natives told HuffPost late Wednesday, hours after submitting a fiery resignation letter , that morale at the agency is in the toilet.

Under Zinke and and President Donald Trump , he said, Interior employees are constantly looking over their shoulder, and those in management positions are walking around miffed that they are not part of key agency decisions.

The secretary has lost the respect of far more than 30 percent of the staff, Clement said.

Zinkes approach to running the agency was on display during a hearing of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources last month. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) took the opportunity to question John Ruhs, acting deputy director of operations at Interiors Bureau of Land Management, about a number of inaccuracies he identified in a leaked copy of Zinkes national monuments report , in which the interior secretary recommended Trump shrink or otherwise modify at least 10 protected sites. Heinrich asked Ruhs if local BLM staff who manage a pair of New Mexico monuments on the administrations chopping block were consulted as part of the administrations review.

Ruhs said BLM did answer questions and provide data as necessary, but that it was not involved in writing the report or asked to fact-check it for accuracy before it was sent to the White House.

Clement called Zinkes monuments report par for the course.

When he gets briefed for a meeting, he receives briefing documents from career staff and he never reads them, Clement said of Zinke. When he delivers a product, like the review of the national monuments, its sloppy and its full of errors. And you can tell that the career staffs never had a look at that. Hes trying to do this with his team of political temps.

Clement added that the workforce is not fooled by its secretarys compliments three days after his loyalty comment, Zinke told The Daily Signal the department has great people or the efforts to boost morale.

You cant make up for that lack of respect by throwing a video game and a couple of dog days in there, he said. Everyone just sort of rolls their eyes.

Clement was referring to Zinkes establishment of Doggy Days at Interior , when employees are allowed to bring their canine companions to work, and the installation of a Big Buck Hunter arcade game in the cafeteria, a bizarre attempt to highlight the contributions the hunting and fishing communities make to conservation.

Clement drew national attention in July with a scathing op-ed in The Washington Post, accusing the administration of silencing science and sidelining him in hopes that he would quit. The seven-year Interior employee was among dozens of senior Interior staff reassigned in June as part of a sweeping reorganization transfers now under investigation by the departments inspector general . Clement went from being director of the departments Office of Policy Analysis where, among other responsibilities, he detailed the effects of global warming on Alaskas native communities to a senior adviser at an office that, as he described it, collects royalty checks from fossil fuel companies.

After being pulled away from the job he loved, Clement struggled to envision a future at Interior. It became increasingly clear that the new post was not the right fit. Zinkes remarks about loyalty proved the final straw.

Its profoundly offensive because it portrays a lack of understanding about the civil service and the mission of the agency, he told HuffPost. It made it clear that what hes trying to do is not work with the career staff and advance the mission hes trying to undercut the agency and its mission. And it became very clear that his interests were aligned with special interests, like the oil and gas industry.

Interior did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this article.

The departments press secretary Heather Swift has previously come to Zinkes defense, telling The Washington Post that his comment about loyalty was not a literal comparison to the flag of the U.S. or even the administration .

In the military structure, to which the secretary was alluding, the flag represents the command of an organization and the policies and procedures it seeks to implement, Swift told the Post.

Since being sworn in in March, Zinke has met with a slew of oil and gas executives , and has spoken at industry conferences and a trade groups board meeting . On social media, he posts regularly about fossil fuels, while rarely mentioning the renewable energy sector. And like other Trump team officials, including Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt, Zinke has worked to roll back regulations to combat climate change, and worked to ensure a better future for coal, oil and gas. Still, he insists that he and Trump dont pick winners and losers and that he favors an all-of-the-above energy strategy .

Meanwhile, conservation has taken a clear backseat, as the administration pushes for so-called energy dominance.

Clement said that while there is still an all-out assault on climate science, it is less flagrant than in the months after Trump first took office. In order to make a difference in the field, however, Clement realized he had to move on.

Zinkes accusation about allegiance which appeared to reflect the administrations wider mistrust of the people it employs made the decision to quit a no-brainer, Clement said. And while he hopes to inspire other federal employees to speak out about whats going on, Clement says its important that talented people remain at Interior, to hold Zinke and the administration accountable and not let them run roughshod over such agencies.

In his resignation letter addressed to Zinke, Clement wrote: My thoughts and wishes are with the career women and men who remain at DOI. I encourage them to persist when possible, resist when necessary, and speak truth to power so the institution may recover and thrive once this assault on its mission is over.

As for his next move, Clement doesnt have anything lined up. But he plans to do what he can to continue supporting those inside the department, and to be a voice for them.

Im thinking of setting up a hotline, a tip line, so that they can reach out to someone and not be worried about it, he said. But of course Im going to need to find a job real soon.

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Read more about Clements resignation here .

Support Free Journalism

Consider supporting HuffPost starting at $2 to help us provide free, quality journalism that puts people first.

Thank you for your past contribution to HuffPost. We are sincerely grateful for readers like you who help us ensure that we can keep our journalism free for everyone.

The stakes are high this year, and our 2024 coverage could use continued support. Would you consider becoming a regular HuffPost contributor?

Thank you for your past contribution to HuffPost. We are sincerely grateful for readers like you who help us ensure that we can keep our journalism free for everyone.

The stakes are high this year, and our 2024 coverage could use continued support. We hope you'll consider contributing to HuffPost once more.

Support HuffPost