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Reuters

Trump withdraws nomination of hospitality executive to head National Park Service

By Kanishka Singh
2 min read
FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump looks on, as he departs the White House for Las Vegas, Nevada, in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 16, 2026. REUTERS/Jessica Koscielniak/File Photo

By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON, April 27 (Reuters) - The White House has withdrawn President Donald Trump's nomination of a hospitality company executive to be director ‌of the National Park Service more than two months after sending ‌the nomination to the U.S. Senate.

The White House did not give a reason for withdrawing the ​nomination of Scott Socha in its announcement on Monday.

Socha oversees the parks and resorts division of hospitality company Delaware North.

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His nomination when announced in February was criticized by conservationists who had called him unqualified for the role over lack of experience ‌in government.

Delaware North had ⁠sued the National Park Service in 2015 and eventually settled the lawsuit for $12 million in 2019 during Trump's first term in ⁠office.

NPS is currently overseen by Jessica Bowron, who is the agency's comptroller and acting director.

NPS is part of the U.S. Interior Department.

The Trump administration has attempted to reshape ​public ​spaces, museums and parks through steps that ​civil rights groups have widely condemned ‌as undoing decades of social progress.

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Trump signed an executive order weeks after taking office targeting what he said was the spread of "anti-American ideology."

The order directed the Interior Department to restore federal parks, monuments and memorials that had been "removed or changed in the last years to perpetuate a false revision of history."

The Interior ‌Department said after the order that all national ​parks' interpretive signage - the plaques and panels that ​explain sites and events - was ​under review.

The Washington Post has reported that U.S. officials have ‌ordered national parks to remove dozens ​of signs and displays ​related to slavery and the mistreatment of Native Americans by settlers.

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In one such attempt where NPS staff removed a slavery exhibit in January from ​a Philadelphia historic site ‌where George Washington once lived, a U.S. federal judge ordered the ​Trump administration to reinstall the slavery exhibit, a decision that NPS ​complied with.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington)

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