Comment Re:Reality (Score 1) 161
That appears to disagree with your earlier argument where you said:
I'd argue that it is the legal name insomuch as it doesn't have a statutory name, leaving him basically free to name it.
Statutory name and legal name are essentially the same thing and you've already said that it doesn't have a statutory name. Otherwise we're just having a pointless semantic argument about what the "legal name" of a place even means. The US does have a board on Geographic names, that could be considered the authority on the legal names of places. The problem is that they have rules and the naming of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America seems to break all their main ones except for the one about naming things after living persons since Vespucci has been dead for centuries. Favoring local usage is one of their most important rules though and that has clearly been broken. Changes are supposed to have a compelling reason. Also, since the Gulf of Mexico is almost entirely international waters, the rules on foreign names may or may not apply.
In any case, overall, it looks like the BGN would not be following its own rules in renaming the Gulf of Mexico, which would make it not a legal change, making it not the legal name. There is also the part in the law about giving "...full consideration to the specific interests of particular Federal
and State agencies." and the part about "...shall be designed to serve the interests of the Federal Government and the general public", both of which were clearly ignored. The violation of the bylaws and the statute that created the BGN to alter board membership and terms would also create a legal issue with the change if, indeed it can be considered to be a legal naming. It is the sort of thing that would need to be argued in court. However, the only entity that might be considered to have standing to sue would be the Associated Press, and they were more interested in the first amendment issues rather than the legality of the name change within the federal government.
In the end, for a plethora of reasons, it seems to me that, between the option of not really having a legal name, or the legal name being the Gulf of America, the facts seem to lean towards it not having a legal name. Also, this is all about someone's complaint that, if they use the name Gulf of America on a Wikipedia article, it will be reverted despite it supposedly being the "legal" name in the US. Of course, reverting it to Gulf of Mexico is very clearly the more neutral option since Wikipedia is international, the Gulf of America thing is clearly political, and the majority of people in the US do not support the name change. Therefore, using the internationally recognized English name in English language pages is clearly the proper choice.