The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Native American voters seek role for election

- By Kali Robinson

Democrats will descend on Iowa to do something Native Americans say doesn’t happen enough: Court their vote.

WASHINGTON >> Democratic presidenti­al candidates will descend on Iowa next week to do something that Native Americans say doesn’t happen enough: court their vote.

At least seven White House hopefuls have said they’ll attend a forum in Sioux City on Monday and Tuesday named for longtime Native American activist Frank LaMere, who died in June. Tribal leaders and citizens will talk with candidates about issues including health care, education and violence against National American women.

Several candidates attending the forum, including Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Julian Castro and Marianne Williamson, have issued platforms dedicated to the needs of indigenous people. Marcella LeBeau, a 99-year-old registered Democrat and a citizen of the Two Kettles Band of the Lakota, said that’s a change from the past when politician­s largely overlooked Native American issues.

“We’re like a third-world country,” she said. “No one really listens to us.”

Many Native Americans live in “hard-to-count” rural areas and are not reflected in the U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey, so the census cannot accurately measure their voter registrati­on as it would for black, white, Asian and Hispanic citizens. Census estimates say Native Americans make up around 1.7% — or 5.3 million — of the U.S. population, and suggest that more than 3.7 million Native Americans are of voting age.

As more Native Americans gain access to the polls, they may be a powerful asset for candidates. Richard Witmer, a political scientist from Creighton University who specialize­s in American Indian politics and policy, said the Native American vote can swing a close national election.

“The Native vote is absolutely going to matter. It’s going to matter a lot,” Witmer said of next year’s race.

Candidates rarely court the Native American vote like they do other demographi­cs, noted Nicole Willis, a citizen of the Confederat­ed Tribes of the Umatilla who lives in Seattle.

“It’s almost like a moral test of a candidate. Like, are you going to pay attention to this group that has traditiona­lly been ignored?” said Willis, who was a Native American outreach adviser to President Barack Obama as well as a 2016 presidenti­al adviser to Sanders.

Warren has had her own problems with the Native American community. After President Donald Trump gave her the nickname “Pocahontas” for her claims of Cherokee citizenshi­p, Warren took a DNA test to try to prove her ancestry. The test did provide some evidence of a Native American in Warren’s lineage, albeit as many as 10 generation­s back.

But the Cherokee Nation complained that tribal nations, not DNA tests, determine citizenshi­p, and that Warren was “underminin­g tribal interests with her continued claims of tribal heritage.” Warren apologized and will face scrutiny at the forum over how she handles the issue.

Ahead of the event, New Mexico Rep. Deb Haaland, a citizen of the Laguna Pueblo and one of the first Native Americans in Congress, endorsed Warren for president. And Warren joined with Haaland on Friday to propose legislatio­n that would cordon off funding for tribal priorities from Congress’ unpredicta­ble appropriat­ions process, fulfilling a key recommenda­tion the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights made last year.

Warren also proposed setting up a permanent White House office dedicated to tribal issues and backed more resources for aiding tribal land acquisitio­n, among other ideas to help Native American communitie­s.

Activists say tribal citizens still face barriers to voting that must be addressed.

Many Native Americans live on far-flung reservatio­ns without polling centers. Before Four Directions, a group promoting voting rights for Native Americans, sued for satellite offices on Nevada’s Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe reservatio­n in 2016, residents had to drive nearly 100 miles roundtrip just to vote, said Oliver “O.J.” Semans, co-founder of the forum and a citizen of South Dakota’s Rosebud Sioux Tribe.

Voter ID requiremen­ts are another hurdle. States such as North Dakota require voters to provide ID and a street address at the polls, so the many rural Natives with only a P.O. Box number have been barred from voting, Semans said.

Just this month, a federal appeals court ruled against members of North Dakota’s Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa, who had said such requiremen­ts were unconstitu­tional.

Four Directions has worked in New Mexico, Montana, South Dakota and elsewhere to abolish ID laws, establish voting centers on reservatio­ns and give Native Americans on reservatio­ns the ability to cast no-excuse absentee ballots, often by suing local government­s.

In some areas where Four Directions has made voting more accessible, Native voter turnout has doubled, Semans said.

 ?? KALI ROBINSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marcella LeBeau, of the Two Kettles Band of the Lakotae, is photograph­ed on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democratic presidenti­al candidates will descend on Iowa next week to do something that Native Americans say doesn’t happen enough: Court their vote. At least seven White House hopefuls have said they’ll attend a forum in Sioux City on Monday and Tuesday named for longtime Native American activist Frank LaMere, who died in June.
KALI ROBINSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marcella LeBeau, of the Two Kettles Band of the Lakotae, is photograph­ed on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democratic presidenti­al candidates will descend on Iowa next week to do something that Native Americans say doesn’t happen enough: Court their vote. At least seven White House hopefuls have said they’ll attend a forum in Sioux City on Monday and Tuesday named for longtime Native American activist Frank LaMere, who died in June.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States