The Guardian (USA)

'I'll be fierce for all of us': Deb Haaland on climate, Native rights and Biden

- Nina Lakhani in New York

Debra Haaland is making American history. The 60- year- old congresswo­man from New Mexico will next month become the first Native American cabinet secretary in US history, when she takes responsibi­lity for the country’s land and natural resources as head of the Department of the Interior under Joe Biden.

Haaland is a member of the Laguna Pueblo, one of 567 sovereign tribal nations located across 35 states. According to the 2010 census, 5.2 million people or about 2% of the US population identifies as American Indian or Alaskan Native – descendant­s of those who survived US government policies to kill, remove or assimilate indigenous peoples.

Come January it will also be Haaland’s job to uphold the government’s legally binding obligation­s to the tribes – treaty obligation­s which have been systematic­ally violated with devastatin­g consequenc­es for life expectancy, political participat­ion and economic opportunit­ies in Indian Country.

In an interview days before her nomination, Haaland told the Guardian that as secretary of the interior she would “move climate change priorities, tribal consultati­on and a green economic recovery forward”.

It’s a big job with high expectatio­ns after four years of racist rhetoric and destructiv­e environmen­tal rollbacks by the Trump administra­tion, which showed contempt for the climate or environmen­t by green-lighting planet-heating fossil fuel projects on public and tribal lands with little regard for culturally and ecological­ly important sites.

“I’ll be fierce for all of us, for our planet, and all of our protected land,” said Haaland in her acceptance speech. “This moment is profound when we consider the fact that a former secretary of the interior once proclaimed it his goal to, quote, ‘civilize or exterminat­e’ us. I’m a living testament to the

failure of that horrific ideology.”

Indigenous communitie­s in the US, and globally, are disproport­ionately vulnerable to the impact of the climate crisis such as rising sea levels and droughts, and environmen­tal hazards resulting from polluting industries. As secretary of the interior, Haaland will play a key role in undoing Trump’s rollbacks and will also be a key lieutenant in Biden’s new climate team.

This is not the first time Haaland has made history. In 2018, she became one of the first two Native women in Congress, alongside Sharice Davids of Kansas. In January, a record-breaking six Native Americans – four Democrats and two Republican­s – will be sworn in.

Representa­tion and diversity matter, according to Haaland, because life experience­s shape political decisions. “We don’t need people who all have the same perspectiv­e, we need people from various parts of the country, who’ve been raised in different ways, who bring that history and culture with them, and employ what we’ve learnt from their parents and grandparen­ts, and bring all of that to bear in the decisions that we make,” she told the Guardian.

It’s been a rocky road for Haaland who like a disproport­ionate number of Native Americans has experience­d homelessne­ss and relied on food stamps. She is also the product of racist policies such as the forced removal of thousands of Native children from their families between 1860 and 1978. At the age of eight, Haaland’s grandmothe­r was sent to a Catholic boarding school for five years a hundred miles from home.

“There are a lot of people in this country who suffered historical trauma from that era. I carry that history with me, I’m a product of the assimilati­on policy of the United States. I feel very strongly that having this perspectiv­e is super important for the issues we bring to Congress.”

Haaland was elected to the House of Representa­tives in 2018 after campaignin­g under the slogan: “Congress has never heard a voice like mine.” Since then, she has introduced legislatio­n that would establish a truth commission on Native American boarding schools and spearheade­d two laws to combat the epidemic of missing and murdered indigenous women – crimes increasing­ly linked to transient extractive industry workers living in so-called man camps near or on tribal lands.

“Indigenous women have been missing and murdered since Europeans came to this continent in the late 1400s. Violence against women is a priority of mine. It’s not going to be fixed with just two pieces of legislatio­n, but now it’s time to dig deeper and keep working,” she said.

Haaland will be the most senior Native American in the US government since the Republican Charles Curtis, a member of the Kaw nation situated in what is now Kansas, who served as vicepresid­ent to Herbert Hoover between 1929 and 1933.

She will be part of a government facing unpreceden­ted complex and interconne­cted challenges including an out-of-control pandemic, global economic recession, spiralling hunger and the climate emergency.

Haaland’s track record working across partisan lines may also prove vital for Biden’s success, at a time when the country – and lawmakers – are deeply divided.

She said: “I’ve gotten more Republican­s to sign on to my bills than any other Democrat. It’s important for all of us – county commission­ers, governors and mayors, not just Congress – to make sure we’re working together for the greater good. We want to pass laws that will help people across the country, and we need to make sure these messages are getting out … I’m going to continue to reach across the aisle, to protect our environmen­t and make sure that vulnerable communitie­s have a say in what our country is doing moving forward.”

The Department of the Interior’s 70,000 or so staff oversee one-fifth of all the land in the US and 1.7bn acres of coastlines, as well as managing national parks, wildlife refuges and natural resources such as gas, oil and water.

A shift in priorities at the interior department could have major implicatio­ns for global heating as about one-quarter of all US carbon emissions come from fossil fuels extracted on public lands, according to the US Geological Survey.

Earlier this year, Haaland sponsored a bill that would set a national goal of protecting 30% of US lands and oceans by 2030 – a plan since adopted by the Biden administra­tion as a priority for his environmen­tal agenda.

“Environmen­tal injustice and economic injustice have taken a hold of so many communitie­s, and they’ve had enough. They want us to pay attention and help them to succeed … As far as Indian Country is concerned, I want to make sure tribal leaders – and all marginaliz­ed communitie­s – have a seat at the table.”

In stark contrast to Trump, Haaland believes that Biden will consult Native Americans – as the government is legally obliged to do. “I am confident that this president will pay attention to Indian Country, that’s why I believe so many [Native Americans] came out to vote, and helped him win Arizona and Wisconsin.”

Restoring protection­s eroded by Trump for Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante – national monuments in southern Utah which are sacred to Native Americans, is a priority for Haaland.

November’s elections took place after a summer of unpreceden­ted protests demanding racial justice sparked by the death of George Floyd, a black man in Minneapoli­s who was killed by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for almost nine minutes.

Progressiv­e Democrats, including Haaland and the so-called Squad – made up of congresswo­men Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna Pressley and Rashida Tlaib - elevated demands by protesters for radical structural changes to eradicate racial inequaliti­es in health, housing, immigratio­n, education, jobs and the environmen­t.

“So many Native Americans joined the Black Lives Matter protests because Indian Country recognised that we are allies in the fight for environmen­tal justice, economic justice and racial justice … These communitie­s on the frontline deserve to have the resources to be able to lift themselves up,” Haaland said.

Violence against women is a priority of mine

Deb Haaland

 ??  ?? Deb Haaland: ‘I’ll be fierce for all of us, for our planet, and all of our protected land.’ Photograph: Jason Andrew/The Guardian
Deb Haaland: ‘I’ll be fierce for all of us, for our planet, and all of our protected land.’ Photograph: Jason Andrew/The Guardian
 ??  ?? Haaland made history as one of the first two Native American women elected to Congress, in 2018. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
Haaland made history as one of the first two Native American women elected to Congress, in 2018. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

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