Posted on August 28, 2019

Cherokee Nation Launches Plan to Send a Delegate to Congress

Associated Press, August 22, 2019

The Cherokee Nation’s plan to send a delegate to the U.S. House, the first such attempt by a tribal nation, will take time as well as cooperation from Congress, the tribe’s newly elected chief said Thursday.

Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. called on Congress to recognize the right of the largest tribe in the nation to have a delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives as outlined in two separate treaties with the U.S. government and the tribe’s constitution.

{snip}

‘We know there is much work to be done to fully effectuate our right to a delegate, but the Cherokee Nation is a strong nation. We know our rights, and we’re prepared to defend and assert our rights.’

Hoskin sent a letter last week to the tribe’s governing council announcing his plan to nominate Kimberly Teehee, a former adviser to President Barack Obama. The tribe’s 17-member council is expected to convene a meeting later this month to consider the proposal.

{snip}

Hoskin said the tribe’s right to a congressional delegate is enshrined in both the 1785 Treaty of Hopewell and the Treaty of New Echota in 1835, the latter of which entitles the tribe to a delegate in the U.S. House ‘whenever Congress shall make provision for the same.’

The New Echota treaty also provided the legal basis for the forced removal of the Cherokee Nation from its ancestral homelands east of the Mississippi in modern-day Georgia and led to the infamous Trail of Tears during which thousands of Cherokees perished.

Hoskin said he expects the path to secure a tribal delegate will be similar to those taken by American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Washington D.C., all of whom have nonvoting members in the U.S. House. Those delegates are given offices and a budget, serve on and vote in committees and help draft legislation, but cannot vote on the floor of the House.

{snip}

The U.S. Supreme Court is considering a tribal sovereignty case that could radically redefine criminal jurisdiction in Oklahoma, and the issue has been at the forefront of protests by indigenous people over the location of a pipeline in the Dakotas and a telescope in Hawaii .

{snip}

Republican U.S. Rep. Markwayne Mullin, himself a Cherokee Nation citizen, said that while the path to seating a delegate remains murky, he is a strong supporter of tribal sovereignty.

{snip}

Some Cherokee Nation citizens voiced concern about Teehee’s nomination because of her long history in Democratic politics, including her stint as President Obama’s senior policy adviser for Native American Affairs.

{snip}

‘The Cherokee Nation is a nonpartisan tribe serving citizens of all political affiliations,’ Walkingstick said in a statement. ‘Hoskin’s decision to nominate such a partisan pick as our sole delegate to the federal government will only continue to divide and silence Cherokees who aren’t as far-left as he is.’

Hoskin countered that Teehee, who has worked for the last several years as the tribe’s vice president of government relations, has a long reputation of working with representatives on both sides of the aisle and remained confident her nomination would be approved by the tribe’s governing council.

The tribe also could face an obstacle of whether such a delegate would unconstitutionally infringe upon the rights of non-Cherokees. It could give Cherokee citizens greater representation in Congress, with both a Cherokee delegate and a representative for the district where they live, according to a legal article on the topic by Ezra Rosser, a professor at American University’s Washington College of Law.

{snip}