‘I didn’t vote for this’: A revolt against DOGE public lands cuts, deep in Trump country

By Cassidy Randall | 12/15/2025 01:11 PM EST

Trump administration policies slashing staffing and funding for public lands are waking a sleeping political giant in Montana. Will either party notice?

Top left: Juanita Vero at her family's guest ranch in Greenough, MT
Top right: Terry Zink points out a spot of prime elk habitat on a rise at the Lost Trail National Wildlife Refuge in Marion, MT
Bottom right: Denny Iverson at his family's ranch.
Bottom left: A worker working on a fuels reduction project near Seeley Lake
Center: Holland lake and the Swan Range in northwest Montana

Photos by Aaron Agosto for POLITICO

The road to the tiny hamlet of Marion in northwest Montana is lined with the thick trees of the Flathead National Forest, with modern homesteads of trailers and modest homes dotting clearings here and there. Outside a timber frame café called the Hilltop Hitching Post, one of the only gathering spots for Marion’s population of less than 1,200, hunter Terry Zink pulled up in a dusty, well-used F-150 pickup and got out wearing a camo jacket against the early September chill, and a ball cap atop wire-rimmed glasses.

Zink, 57, is a third-generation houndsman who hunts big game, including mountain lions and bears. He also owns an archery target business. He’s a rural Montanan whose way of life and livelihood depend on public lands.

He led me into the Hilltop, where half the people inside knew his name, to a corner where we sat drinking diner coffee. “You won’t meet anyone more conservative than me, and I didn’t vote for this,” Zink said.

Advertisement

“This” is the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) deep cuts earlier this year to federal public lands agencies’ funding and to the staff at those agencies who administer that funding and steward public lands and wildlife.

GET FULL ACCESS