For cattle ranchers across Arizona, the federal government has not always felt like an ally, and Congressman Eli Crane (R-AZ) wants to change that.
Crane has spent months alongside three of his Republican colleagues pushing Washington to take a hard look at rules that ranchers say have made their already difficult work even harder, and that pressure appears to have worked.
The Department of the Interior recently unveiled a proposal that would, for the first time in roughly three decades, shake up how grazing on public lands is handled.
"Proud to team up with my colleagues to fight for rural Arizona," Crane wrote on X.
The effort began to take shape last December, when Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ) drafted a letter to top federal officials, making the case that existing policies were quietly strangling the ranching industry.
The Four Congressmen
Biggs, along with Reps. Juan Ciscomani (R-AZ) and Paul Gosar (R-AZ), also signed on. Together, the four pushed for a serious review of regulations they argued had been shaped more by outside advocacy than by the practical realities facing families who make their living off the land.
What emerged from that effort is a proposal that would cut through bureaucratic complexity, give ranchers more room to respond when conditions on the ground shift, and apply land health assessments more broadly across federal programs, rather than targeting grazing operations almost exclusively.
The stakes show real concern as the American cattle industry has been quietly contracting for years, with the number of operations falling sharply even as consumer demand has grown.
For ranching communities in rural Arizona, that trend has translated into tighter margins, harder decisions, and growing frustration with a regulatory environment many feel works against them.
Whether the proposal survives the public comment process remains to be seen.
The four congressmen are making sure that the case for rural Arizona is finally getting heard in Washington.







