Here’s the question we should be asking about public lands grazing.
Why are we still paying for this?
In March 2025, we
first laid out the basic absurdity of the system. Privately owned cattle graze 248 million acres of your federal land for the price of a gas station coffee. Bison, the native animal that built those grasslands, gets fenced in, hazed by helicopters, or slaughtered if it wanders. We thought it was the most infuriating public lands story we’d ever told.
Thirteen months later, the Trump administration proved us right by trying to make it worse. In January 2026, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum
moved to revoke American Prairie’s bison grazing permits after Montana’s Republican delegation asked him to. The BLM finalized that decision in May 2026, ordering the
removal of bison from 63,000 acres of federal public lands by September 30. We covered the eviction in detail. We’re not retelling that story.
We’re telling the one underneath it. The federal grazing program isn’t a quirk or a relic. It’s an active welfare system, designed by a lobby that represents less than 3 percent of American ranchers, funded by a federal tax on the people it claims to speak for, and protected by a political coalition that gets very rich pretending to defend the family ranch. Almost everything you’ve been told about public lands grazing is propaganda. The math is worse than you think. The beneficiaries aren’t who you’ve been told. And the cost to the West, ecological, economic, and political, is catastrophic.
This is the piece about why a system everyone with a calculator can see is broken refuses to die. About who profits from keeping it alive. And about what it would take to finally stop paying….