Congress
Related: About this forumCherokee Nation of Oklahoma could get first delegate to Congress in 200 years
The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma moved a step closer on Wednesday to having a promise fulfilled from nearly 200 years ago that a delegate from the tribe be seated in Congress.
Chuck Hoskin Jr, principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, was among those who testified before the US House rules committee, which is the first to examine the prospect of seating a Cherokee delegate in the US House. Hoskin, the elected leader of the 440,000-member tribe, put the effort in motion in 2019 when he nominated Kimberly Teehee, a former adviser to Barack Obama, to the position. The tribes governing council then unanimously approved her.
The tribes right to a delegate is detailed in the Treaty of New Echota signed in 1835, which provided the legal basis for the forced removal of the Cherokee Nation from its ancestral homelands east of the Mississippi River and led to the Trail of Tears, but it has never been exercised. A separate treaty in 1866 affirmed this right, Hoskin said.
The Cherokee Nation has in fact adhered to our obligations under these treaties. Im here to ask the United States to do the same, Hoskin told the panel.
Hoskin suggested to the committee that Teehee could be seated as early as this year by way of either a resolution or change in statute, and the committees chairman, the Massachusetts Democrat James McGovern, and other members supported the idea that it could be accomplished quickly.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/nov/16/cherokee-nation-oklahoma-first-congress-delegate
About damn time. But all these nations, commonwealths, and territories should also be allowed to vote on matters that affect them.
DURHAM D
(32,847 posts)Do any other tribes have the same language in their treaties?
AllaN01Bear
(23,194 posts)AllaN01Bear
(23,194 posts)Duppers
(28,257 posts)A recent titbit about the Cherokee in their native habitat, western N.C.:
Long before the Great Smoky Mountains National Park's highest peak was named "Clingmans Dome," the Cherokee people called the mountain "Kuwahi" for hundreds of years.
Now, tribal members are hoping to return to the Kuwahi name. Last Thursday, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Tribal Council passed a resolution in support of renaming the mountain, which is located along the Tennessee-North Carolina border.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/07/19/great-smoky-mountains-clingmans-dome-cherokee-kuwahi/10095266002/
Those beautiful mountains belonged to them and, damn it, they have the right to name their peaks.
Shameful U.S. history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trail_of_Tears
Jilly_in_VA
(10,989 posts)got the name "Denali" returned to them. Tribes in Washington state (I think) have tried to get "Tacoma" returned, but "Rainier" it remains, and who the heck was he? The Chinese refer to Mt. Everest as "Qomolungma" (Chomolungma in Western spelling) which is its true name and we should to, since most of the Himalayas are called by their true names--Nanga Parbat, Nanda Devi, etc. Only Everest and K2 stand out, and I don't even know what K2's native name is.