The Oklahoman

Hoskin wins another four-year term as chief of Cherokee Nation with nearly 63% in 4-way race

- Sean Murphy

OKLAHOMA CITY – Cherokee Nation's Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. won reelection to another four-year term as leader of the nation's most populous tribe, according to results certified Monday by the tribe's Election Commission.

Hoskin, a 48-year-old attorney, won nearly 63% of the vote in the four-way race for chief, a position similar to the governor of a state.

Hoskin's running mate, Bryan Warner, won reelection to deputy chief with about 62% of the vote. Both needed to secure more than 50% to avoid a runoff.

“Today, we celebrate not only a victory but a renewal of our shared commitment to the principles that have guided our nation for centuries,” Hoskin and Warner said in a joint statement. “Together, we will confront the challenges that lie ahead, united in our determinat­ion to uplift and empower every member of our Cherokee family.”

Hoskin ran on a platform of protecting tribal sovereignt­y, investing in improved health and wellness for tribal citizens and funding efforts to protect its language.

During Hoskin's first four years in office, the Cherokee Nation has seen its tribal budget more than triple with the help of an infusion of federal funding and its sprawling reservatio­n in northeast Oklahoma was upheld in a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision on tribal sovereignt­y.

The nation also has seen its effort to have a tribal delegate seated in Congress pick up steam.

The results show three of the eight tribal council races on the ballot in Saturday's election will head to a runoff election in July.

Those elected to a seat on the 17member council without a runoff include Julia Coates, Joe Deere, Kevin Easley Jr., Daryl Legg and Dora Patzkowski.

Based in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, the Cherokee Nation has a population that has risen in recent years to more than 450,000 members.

It is one of 39 federally recognized tribes with headquarte­rs in a state once known as Indian Territory, where indigenous people were forced to relocate in the 1800s as European settlers expanded westward.

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