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Native Americans Are Finding Their Voice in Government

HELENA, Mont. — Jonathan Windy Boy was a longtime champion of the international Grass Dance competition, a native event in which the object is to simulate the natural movement of tall prairie grass in the wind.But, recalled Windy Boy with a laugh, “that was many years and about 40 pounds ago.”

Now Windy Boy moves his considerable frame around the House chamber in the state capitol here, bargaining and cajoling as a leader of the 10-member American Indian caucus in Montana’s state legislature.

The caucus has the highest number of Indians ever elected to the 150-member chamber and reflects a trend of increased participation by American Indians in state politics across the U.S.

When legislatures convened earlier this year, about 73 Indian, native Alaskan or native Hawaiian lawmakers were sworn in, the highest number in U.S. history, according to the National Congress of American Indians, a tribal advocacy group.

Windy Boy recalls that while he was growing up on a Chippewa-Cree Indian reservation in north-central Montana, “there was a lot of skepticism, a lot of cynicism about the idea of voting at all.”

Within the system
“Some people didn’t vote as a point of pride - defiance, even,” he said. “But that’s all changed. There’s much more of a sense today that we can work within this system.”

The Indian vote was important in several state races in 2006, and turnout on the reservations and among urban Indians in Montana was key to Democrat Jon Tester’s narrow defeat of incumbent Republican Conrad Burns in the recent U.S. Senate election here.

For now, the Indian vote in Montana is solidly Democratic; all 10 Indian members of the Montana legislature belong to the party.

“An Indian voting Republican is like the chicken voting for the colonel,” says Gov. Brian Schweitzer, himself a Democrat.

Republicans obviously reject that notion, noting that 15 of the 73 native lawmakers belong to the GOP, according to figures tracked by the Denver-based National Conference of State Legislatures. And perhaps the best-known American Indian politician of recent years, former Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado, a member of the Northern Cheyenne tribe, started as a Democrat but switched to Republican in 1995.

Oklahoma has the most native legislators, with 19, while Hawaii and Montana have 10 each, followed by Alaska with eight.

Casino wealth and other development have made American Indians increasingly politically active as they deal with regulation of their businesses as well as access to state funds for health care, tribal policing and other matters.

And while the poverty and unemployment rampant on a lot of reservations leaves many disillusioned with politics, others have a sense of optimism about the impact of their vote.

“There’s been a sea change in my lifetime,” said Jefferson Keel, lieutenant governor of the Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma and a first vice president of the National Congress of American Indians.

“What we have now is a lot of tribal development,” Keel said. “It’s not just casinos. There’s a lot of manufacturing. So people feel a real stake in the system.”

The national Indian congress, a federation of tribes, launched a “Native Vote Campaign” in 2004 to “advance the Native agenda at all levels of decision-making and promote Native candidates to public offices,” according to the group’s literature.

Here in Helena, Rep. Windy Boy said the Indian caucus had succeeded in recent years in gaining state funds for health clinics, water-reclamation projects and cleanup of old mining areas.

Indian priorities fared particularly well in the 2005 session because there was a Democrat in the governor’s office and Democratic control in the legislature, said Windy Boy. (Democrats still control the Senate, 26-24, but Republicans have a 50-49 edge in the House, with one other member of the body affiliating with the Constitution Party.)

Different stances
But, said Windy Boy - at 48 a tall man with a bolo tie and ponytail hair almost to his waist - that’s not to say the Democrats should “take us for granted.”

For instance, both he and Margaret Campbell, an Indian who represents an Assiniboine and Sioux reservation in eastern Montana, said they oppose abortion rights and gay marriage, two issues on which many Democrats disagree with them.

“There are very specific tribal teachings about life and the sanctity of life,” said Campbell, the minority whip in the legislature. “And I can’t ever imagine being in favor of gay marriage. That would kill me in my district.”

Windy Boy, who kept bounding up from his chair during an interview to greet fellow lawmakers, aides and lobbyists in the chamber offices, said he decided to go into state politics after many frustrating sessions as an outsider.

As a tribal leader, he would come to Helena to lobby on matters ranging from health care to economic incentives to attract industry to the remote reservation.

“It was very aggravating,” he said. “I felt like we were being undermined in a lot of areas, like welfare and health issues. I thought we were victorious, but then the next day you’d realize someone had thrown up a mysterious obstacle to getting it done.

“So basically, I concluded I was on the wrong side of the table,” he said. Windy Boy won in 2002 and plans eventually, he said, to run for a seat in the state Senate.

Copyright © 2007, The Baltimore Sun

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10 Comments so far

  1. Indigenous Action Media April 22nd, 2007 1:41 pm

    It’s good to see that Common Dreams is finally recognizing Indigenous issues somewhat. Unfortunately it appears that our stories are only covered when they fall in line with a progressive agenda. We are still here and our news is important. I hope that CD covers more issues than that of the current status quo.
    Additional sites for sources of Indigenous issues and stories:
    www.bsnorrell.tripod.com
    www.indianz.com

  2. NMBill April 22nd, 2007 2:38 pm
  3. old goat April 22nd, 2007 4:09 pm

    http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096414872

    a terrific link for late breaking news in Indian Country. Maybe Common Dreams will begin to pick up on this important link.

  4. iwarrior April 22nd, 2007 5:05 pm

    Sometimes I think everyone who isn’t of Native American blood should leave and go back to the countries of their ancestors, and let them have America back.

  5. Gail April 22nd, 2007 5:38 pm

    ““An Indian voting Republican is like the chicken voting for the colonel,” says Gov. Brian Schweitzer, himself a Democrat.

    Republicans obviously reject that notion, noting that 15 of the 73 native lawmakers belong to the GOP,…”

    Has the Grand Old Party forgoten how to count? 15 out of 73 is not exactly a majority, in fact, it’s not even close! So, it would appear that the majority of Native Americans are no longer interested in the party that “fries ass”.

  6. collidingrivers April 22nd, 2007 5:51 pm

    Hey iwarrior,
    Your concern for Native Americans is a good thing- but the US is such a melting pot, looks like we’ll jus have to stay ’cause most people really don’t know where their ancestors originated, at least rarely the full story.
    Many of those walking around who are racist “Whites”, in fact are probably from a mixed heritage, especially if their ancestry in the US goes back a long ways. Also, many families in the US are what has been termed “Melungeon”, or “tri-racial”, and a lot don’t even know it!
    Thanks to the harsh racist laws in places like VA, a couple of hundred years ago or more, then following for numerous decades after, there were mass movements of people of color who would leave and form communities in far flung areas of the frontier- often even mixing with native American communties, so many tri-racials have Native American and African American as well as European roots.
    In my own family, I grew up hearing certain members make the occassional racist remark- little did they know, they have African as well as Native American & European ancestors. It was a hoot, after I got back my genetic origins profile (these aren’t perfect, so think about it before investing the money), tohave the opportunity to inform my family that as my genealogy research indicated, we are indeed of mixed heritage, and even- gasp!- “Black”.

  7. iwarrior April 22nd, 2007 6:13 pm

    Well, I’m concerned about all of us really. But thanks. As far as I know, I’m a Polish, Irish, Hungarian, German mix, so I’m not exactly sure where I’d go. :) Maybe Poland since that’s where the bulk of my heritage is. I have heard that a lot of whites have some black ancestry and don’t know it as well as Native American blood.

    I used to work with a guy that claimed that he was 1/4 Native American. He was a tall white guy with a German last name. He also claimed that he was being discriminated by the company we worked for because he was partly Native American. Funny, since you wouldn’t know unless he told you.

  8. Preston April 22nd, 2007 7:02 pm

    I’d also recommend the website for “Cultural Survival” http://www.cs.org
    It would be great if progressive talk radio would interview people like Winona LaDuke.

  9. AD April 23rd, 2007 9:52 am

    It’s good to these indigenous people are finally getting their voices heard, at least to some extent, as they deserve that. We of the European persuasion ripped off this country from them. But maybe as Martin Luther King Jr said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

  10. AD April 23rd, 2007 9:54 am

    CLARIFICATION– the “to” between “good” and “these” isn’t necessary and should be left out.

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