New Interior sec'y ponies up to work at first day in office

AP  |  Washington 

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke arrived on horseback for his first day of work today.

The morning after his swearing-in ceremony, the former Montana congressman and Navy SEAL joined the US Park Police at their stables on the National Mall. He rode a 17-year-old Irish sport horse named Tonto through downtown to the Interior Department's headquarters. Nine park police also on horseback accompanied him.



"Secretary Zinke was proud to accept an invitation by the US Park Police to stand shoulder to shoulder with their officers on his first day at Interior," said Interior spokeswoman Heather Swift.

Zinke and Interior Twitter accounts posted photos. There he is in a black cowboy hat astride a brown bay roan gelding that stands just over 17 hands tall, a bus and typical morning traffic in the background.

At the department, hundreds of federal workers greeted Zinke, including an Office of Indian Affairs employee from the Northern Cheyenne tribe from Montana who played an honor song on a hand drum.

Can Zinke do for horses what Joe Biden did for trains? The former vice president and senator famously commuted to his home in Delaware by train for decades.

While Zinke's urban horse ride is unlikely to become a daily ritual, he seems committed to preserving his image as an avid outdoorsman. He wears a bright orange ballcap and hunting vest in the bio photo of his new @secretaryzinke Twitter account. And he has already retweeted a photo showing him and his wife at Glacier National Park in Montana.

The Interior Department oversees 400 million acres of public land, mostly in the West.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

New Interior sec'y ponies up to work at first day in office

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke arrived on horseback for his first day of work today. The morning after his swearing-in ceremony, the former Montana congressman and Navy SEAL joined the US Park Police at their stables on the National Mall. He rode a 17-year-old Irish sport horse named Tonto through downtown Washington to the Interior Department's headquarters. Nine park police also on horseback accompanied him. "Secretary Zinke was proud to accept an invitation by the US Park Police to stand shoulder to shoulder with their officers on his first day at Interior," said Interior spokeswoman Heather Swift. Zinke and Interior Twitter accounts posted photos. There he is in a black cowboy hat astride a brown bay roan gelding that stands just over 17 hands tall, a bus and typical morning traffic in the background. At the department, hundreds of federal workers greeted Zinke, including an Office of Indian Affairs employee from the Northern Cheyenne tribe from Montana who played an honor song ... Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke arrived on horseback for his first day of work today.

The morning after his swearing-in ceremony, the former Montana congressman and Navy SEAL joined the US Park Police at their stables on the National Mall. He rode a 17-year-old Irish sport horse named Tonto through downtown to the Interior Department's headquarters. Nine park police also on horseback accompanied him.

"Secretary Zinke was proud to accept an invitation by the US Park Police to stand shoulder to shoulder with their officers on his first day at Interior," said Interior spokeswoman Heather Swift.

Zinke and Interior Twitter accounts posted photos. There he is in a black cowboy hat astride a brown bay roan gelding that stands just over 17 hands tall, a bus and typical morning traffic in the background.

At the department, hundreds of federal workers greeted Zinke, including an Office of Indian Affairs employee from the Northern Cheyenne tribe from Montana who played an honor song on a hand drum.

Can Zinke do for horses what Joe Biden did for trains? The former vice president and senator famously commuted to his home in Delaware by train for decades.

While Zinke's urban horse ride is unlikely to become a daily ritual, he seems committed to preserving his image as an avid outdoorsman. He wears a bright orange ballcap and hunting vest in the bio photo of his new @secretaryzinke Twitter account. And he has already retweeted a photo showing him and his wife at Glacier National Park in Montana.

The Interior Department oversees 400 million acres of public land, mostly in the West.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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