Texarkana Gazette

Native Americans fight back at the ballot box

- By Matt Vasilogamb­ros Stateline.org

SAN JUAN COUNTY, Utah—Tara Benally and her 16-year-old son Delaney After Buffalo set up a plastic table alongside the last dusty highway intersecti­on before the Arizona state line. Here in Monument Valley, in the shadows of the towering red rock monoliths sacred among the Navajo, the two are doing something that's rarely been done in this part of Utah: conducting a voter registrati­on drive for local Native Americans.

For the first time, Navajo and Utes living here have a chance at being fully represente­d at the local level when they vote in November. Even though Native Americans are the majority in this 14,750-person county, slightly edging out whites, county commission­er and school board district lines were gerrymande­red to give white voters disproport­ionate power for more than three decades.

Many Native Americans across the West are still hamstrung by voter ID laws, polling place closures and voter registrati­on purges. But in San Juan County and many other places, they are beginning to fight back, running for local, state and national offices, and suing jurisdicti­ons that try to curb their political participat­ion. They could even have a significan­t impact on some key midterm elections.

In 2012, Democrat Heidi Heitkamp won her tight U.S. Senate race in solidly Republican North Dakota because of high turnout among Native American voters, who tend to favor Democratic candidates. They viewed the Democrat as an advocate for their communitie­s.

But in the years after her victory, the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e passed strict voter ID laws that one federal judge said had a "discrimina­tory and burdensome impact on Native Americans," since they are more than twice as likely to lack a qualifying identifica­tion.

Despite a legal setback last week, Native Americans continue to challenge the North Dakota law. Meanwhile, Heitkamp is seeking re-election. Hers is one of the handful of Democratic seats that Republican­s are targeting in November.

Native Americans also have helped sway Senate races in Washington, South Dakota, Alaska and Montana, despite persistent discrimina­tion, said Jacqueline De Leon, an attorney at the Native American Rights Fund, a Colorado-based legal assistance organizati­on.

De Leon, a member of the Isleta Pueblo tribe, points to counties in Montana that limit the number of registrati­on forms for reservatio­ns, in Wisconsin that put heavily Native American polling locations in sheriff's offices to intimidate, in Nevada and South Dakota that deny polling locations on reservatio­ns, and in Arizona that shut tribal polling locations under the guise of disability compliance issues.

"Racism and discrimina­tion exists to a degree that would be appalling to most Americans," she said. "The disenfranc­hisement is familiar and the tools are familiar."

For Native Americans in San Juan County, particular­ly those who live on the Navajo Nation Reservatio­n in the southern half of the county, the lack of political power has meant no voting precincts, no new high schools or roads, no language assistance, no running water and rare jury selection during those decades. A Justice Department official, reviewing the education access for Native Americans in the county in 1997, said, "I haven't seen anything so bad since the

'60s in the South."

But the county was given an opportunit­y to change this when a federal judge in December redrew the lines, which now favor Native Americans in two of the three county commission seats and three of the five school board seats. He said the old lines offended "basic democratic principles."

"We're still out here every day, going door to door, explaining to the people why we're doing this," Benally said, as the swift desert wind blew her jet-black hair. "If we get those two county commission­ers in office, it changes everything. It's that important. This is something that needs to take place."

In San Juan County, which is twice the size of Connecticu­t, the majority-white towns of Blanding and Monticello in the north and the majority-Navajo towns of Monument Valley and Navajo Mountain in the south are different worlds. Cool winds flow off the green mountains and onto the abundant grasslands of the north. It's ideal for grazing, and growing wheat and alfalfa. It's nothing like the red-rocked arid desert of the south. The canyon that divides the two regions is more than just a physical barrier.

Since Mormon settlers arrived in 1880, Navajo and Ute residents have had their lives, land and votes taken from them. The same year Native Americans were given the right to vote in Utah in 1957, the Bureau of Land Management forcibly removed many in San Juan County from their homes, pushing them south of San Juan River and away from the white population, wrote Daniel McCool, a professor emeritus of political science at the University of Utah, in a 247page expert witness testimony in the gerrymande­ring case.

Nearly three decades later, the U.S. Department of Justice sued the county for discrimina­tory voting practices, forcing the county in 1984 to switch the elections for three county commission­ers from at-large to voting in three individual districts. But that didn't end electoral discrimina­tion: Even though Native Americans are the biggest demographi­c group in the county, most of those voters were packed into one district and diluted in the remaining two districts.

Mark Maryboy became the first Navajo elected to the county commission in 1986, and ran for years on the Navajo slogan, "Niha whol zhiizh"—meaning "It's our turn." In his 16 years on the commission, Maryboy was frequently the sole vote favoring investment for projects on the reservatio­n.

"There's so much resentment, so much opposition against a Navajo being in public office," he said, fiddling with his silver and red-coral bracelet in the Twin Rocks Cafe in Bluff. Tall and lean at 62, he has the dark, careworn eyes of a much older person.

Political life in San Juan County has often turned ugly. White leaders, like current Republican County Commission Chairman Bruce Adams, have tried to erase the Navajo role in county history, claiming "nobody really had settled here" before the Mormons arrived. Phil Lyman, another Republican county commission­er who is now running for the state House, has said Navajos "lost the war" and should have no role in local land management. Maryboy, for his part, called Lyman "one of the most racist people in the entire United States."

In the last two years, the Navajo Nation has successful­ly sued the county in federal court over Voting Rights Act violations, forcing it to redraw county commission and school board district lines, provide in-person translator­s and audio ballot recordings for Navajo voters, open two new satellite voting locations on the Navajo Nation to cut travel time in half, and put a Navajo candidate back on the ballot for county commission­er after the county clerk-auditor, John David Nielson, kicked him off "without legal authority," according to a federal judge in August.

These court cases attempt to correct a history of "invidious and intentiona­l discrimina­tion" in the county, wrote McCool.

Lyman said this is a "false narrative." White-haired with piercing green eyes, his big build matches his imposing presence in a room. He draws the new county lines with his hands on the table of the Patio Drive In burger joint in Blanding, nearly knocking over his Diet Dr. Pepper. He and other white officials are the real victims, he said.

"People are trying to destroy San Juan County," Lyman said, arms raised. "The issues that are being highlighte­d in San Juan County are being highlighte­d by people who aren't in San Juan County. People are being agitated by outside forces who are trying to drive an issue, which is foreign to the people who live here and not anything that's genuine."

For the first time in state history, though, Utah in November will send officials to a county to observe an election, making sure court directives are followed. Justin Lee, state director of elections, said the county and its clerk, Nielson, lost the state's confidence in running fair elections.

The history of discrimina­tion only adds to a deep sense of hopelessne­ss among Native voters here. It's pervasive and widespread, said Leonard Gorman, the executive director of the Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission.

"It's hard to convince people that change is here, change will happen," Gorman said. "It's challengin­g for them to take a second look."

It's a challenge that Benally and her son face when they attempt to register new voters. The two are part of the skeleton staff of the Rural Utah Project, a Moabbased nonprofit focused on energizing the state's spread-out and isolated communitie­s. Since February, they have registered more than 1,400 Navajo voters in San Juan County, and continue to update voters' registrati­on to match the new district lines.

It's quiet on this stark, cloudless plateau as the former carpenter waits to register voters, save for the occasional tourist bus, SUV or pack of motorcycle­s taking the long pilgrimage to the monuments that have come to define the cinematic Wild West. She weaves Navajo words into her passionate speech—she talks about "ho'zho," a concept of balance and beauty, and protecting the Dine, her people.

In 2014, the county became the 27th of 29 in Utah to adopt a vote-by-mail system. But that's come with its own challenges. Children often translated ballot initiative­s and candidate informatio­n for elders who don't understand English, Benally said. It's a common problem for Native Americans across the county.

Many other Navajo, who often share a P.O. Box with several others, threw ballots away, thinking they were junk mail, or missed the filing deadline. As a result, voter turnout among Native Americans in San Juan County dipped in the 2014 election.

Only a quarter of county residents have street addresses, so they rely on GIS coordinate­s to place their homes on voter registrati­on forms. Since the redistrict­ing, many registrati­ons are outdated and often misplace voters. If she can't find coordinate­s on her cellphone from a lack of signal, Benally asks voters to describe their home's physical location—"four miles west of Goulding's" or "two miles north of Train Rock"—so she can place them in the right precinct. They can then write a P.O. Box as their mailing address.

As Benally registers 27-year-old Shaye Holiday, a soft-spoken man with red braces and hair tied in a bun who has never voted in the county, a silver Chevy pickup truck pulls over to the side of the road.

Nelson Yellowman, clean-shaven with muddy shoes and a black Denver Broncos hat, has come to update his registrati­on. The county, Navajo Nation and the Rural Utah Project have been busy correcting GIS locations of voters' addresses ahead of the November election.

"I might be in a lake," he joked, his hands stuffed in the pockets of his gray cargo pants.

Yellowman, who is running for his fifth term on the school board, said he is constantly fighting to allow Native children to use facilities throughout the school district.

Later in the afternoon, Benally and After Buffalo leave their roadside registrati­on operation and head to nearby Oljato to register more voters at their homes. But canvassing to register voters isn't like going door to door in Salt Lake City or another compact, traditiona­lly zoned community. The county roads are made of gravel and dirt. When it rains or snows, cars and buses get stuck. The county refuses to pave the roads, claiming they are the responsibi­lity of the reservatio­n. The Navajo Nation says it's the job of the county. The roads remain dilapidate­d.

It's a bumpy, nauseating ride to the trailers and one-story shacks with old tires, plywood and rusted truck shells littering their properties that hug red bluffs. A dozen thin cows graze the desert brush that dots the desert floor, as a dust devil churns up the sandy earth 100 feet in the air. It's the same trip children make every day in buses to school.

Leonard Holiday gladly fills out a registrati­on form after learning about the new districts.

"Oh wow, that would really help us," he told After Buffalo. "Though, the last time I tried voting they ran out of ballots. The voting machine broke another time. It's disappoint­ing."

This sort of interactio­n has happened with dozens of voters, Benally and After Buffalo said. People often tell them their vote doesn't matter, they don't care, the system doesn't want them, and they don't want to be part of the system. It's Maryboy's biggest frustratio­n as a community leader.

"Most Navajos have been beaten down to the ground for so many years," Maryboy said. "There's no confidence in themselves or their government. They've seen the roads when it snows, when it rains, the buses get stuck. Students miss school. Over the years, they felt the county government is a worthless government."

As is the case in San Juan County, voter turnout among Native Americans is far less than other racial groups. American Indian and Alaska Native turnout is 5 to 14 percentage points lower than registered voters from other racial or ethnic groups, according to a 2012 study from Demos, a New York City-based think tank. Further, among the Native population over age 18, a third—or one million people—are not registered to vote.

There are many reasons for such low turnout. A January survey of Native American voters in Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada and South Dakota by the Native American Voting Rights Coalition, a Native American Rights Fundbacked group of nonprofits, activists and lawyers, found that isolating geographic conditions, a lack of registrati­on drives and language assistance, non-traditiona­l mailing addresses and distrust of government were just some of barriers Native voters listed.

While Native American voter engagement is rare, De Leon said, some tribes have made special efforts to register voters and approach local counties to get more people to the polls, including the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona and the Suquamish Tribe in Washington.

In New Mexico, the secretary of state's office runs the Native American Voting Task Force to assist voters in the electoral process. And in Alaska, the Native American Voting Rights fund won a lawsuit in 2014, forcing the state to provide language assistance in 29 Native communitie­s through the 2020 general election.

As the Native American population continues to grow across the country—from 1.9 million in 1990 to 6.6 million in 2015—so too has their political representa­tion. Now, 64 Native Americans serve as state legislator­s in 15 states. And there are two Native American U.S. congressme­n.

In November, Democrat Deb Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe in New Mexico, is favored to become the first female Native American elected to Congress.

James Adakai, a Navajo who is chairman of the San Juan County Democratic Party, thinks Native Americans can help Democrats win future elections in the county, as well. Hillary Clinton lost here by 600 votes in 2016, 37 to 48 percent.

Democrats held their first county convention in March, where 300 people came. It was "momentous and historic," he said, moving his hands from his chin of stringy black hair to his bolo tie with the seal of the Navajo Nation. If Navajos come out in force, it could make this Republican corner of Utah a little more Democratic.

"We're dealing with something that other parts of the country dealt with 50 years ago: racial and social injustices," he said. "Native Americans' votes have been disenfranc­hised for a very long time. It would mean a lot to fix that."

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? ■ Delaney After Buffalo, right, registers Leonard Holiday to vote in Oljato, Utah. Many Native Americans face barriers when trying to vote.
Tribune News Service ■ Delaney After Buffalo, right, registers Leonard Holiday to vote in Oljato, Utah. Many Native Americans face barriers when trying to vote.
 ?? Tribune News Service ?? ■ Delaney After Buffalo, left, and Tara Benally register Shaye Holiday to vote in Monument Valley, Utah. Native Americans here have a chance to take control of local government for the first time.
Tribune News Service ■ Delaney After Buffalo, left, and Tara Benally register Shaye Holiday to vote in Monument Valley, Utah. Native Americans here have a chance to take control of local government for the first time.

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