Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Half Price Tapas with Scotland on Sunday

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Democrats vie for the Indian vote



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 03 June 2008
THE purification ceremony is not an everyday ritual of United States presidential politics.
The newly named Awe Kooda Bilaxpak Kuuxshish – better known as Barack Obama – faced east, the symbolic source of new life. His adopted Crow father, Hartford Black Eagle, prayed over him.

They then walked arm in arm with Black Eagle's wife, Mary, t
o a podium, where Mr Obama promised to live up to the meaning of his new name, "One who helps people throughout the land".

"I want you to know that I will never forget you," Mr Obama told the crowd, who had not seen a visitor of such political importance since Lady Bird Johnson went to the Montana reservation in the 1960s. "You will be on my mind every day that I am in the White House."

Often paid scant attention in US presidential elections, Native Americans are taking an unusually high profile in the final stretch of the Democratic primary campaign. Both Mr Obama and Hillary Clinton have visited reservations in the rugged western states of Montana and South Dakota, which today hold the final contests in the drawn-out state-by-state battle.

One Montana tribe, the Crow Nation, has ceremonially adopted Mr Obama. The Crow chairman, Carl Venne, said the Illinois senator was the first presidential candidate ever to visit his tribe in south-eastern Montana. "Never before have we had such hope for a candidate, except maybe a Kennedy," he said.

In previous elections, the Democratic candidate has been decided long before primary voting in Montana and South Dakota, and Mr Obama is looking finally to wrap up the nomination today.

Just above 1 per cent of the US population is Native American, but almost 9 per cent of South Dakota's roughly 800,000 residents are American Indian – the third highest population in the country. About 6 per cent of Montana's slightly larger population are American Indian. Those voters are traditionally Democratic, though Republicans have worked hard to woo them in recent elections.

Poverty is widespread among many tribes, especially in remote areas of the western states, and many Native Americans see Democrats as more sympathetic to issues important on the reservations, including jobs and better health care and education.

As with all voters, Native Americans are divided.

In a speech last week on South Dakota's Pine Ridge Reservation, Mrs Clinton touted jobs for those out of work and better healthcare. She has also pledged to increase money for employment and to fight diabetes among Indian youths. She has also benefited from her husband's record.

Thomas Shortbull, the president of South Dakota's Oglala Lakota College, supports her because Bill Clinton, as president, worked to get more education and housing money to reservations in the 1990s.

"We know what we'll get with a Clinton administration and we don't know what we'll get with an Obama presidency," he said.

Geri Small, the Northern Cheyenne president in Lame Deer, Montana, has also endorsed the New York senator. As for the adoption of Mr Obama by the Crow tribe next door, her assistant, Clara Caufield, scoffed: "We take our traditions more seriously than that. The Crow adopt people at the drop of a hat."

However, should the Democrats lose in the November presidential election, some say the Republican, John McCain, represents a better-than-usual second choice for Native Americans.

Ms Caufield said: "Hillary and Obama are getting up to speed on Indian affairs, while McCain in Arizona already represents the largest Native American community in the country, the Navajos."

Mr McCain has twice served as chairman of the US Senate committee on Indian affairs and is knowledgeable about the complex issues facing Native Americans. Many also respect his past military service.

One prominent Native American who has worked with Mr McCain is Elouise Cobell, a Montana member of the Blackfeet tribe. She is leading a multi-billion-dollar lawsuit against the US government, claiming tribes were cheated for more than a century out of payments made for the rights to mine, farm and graze on their land.

"He's sympathetic, but that's the problem we have here with Indian issues," Ms Cobell said about Mr McCain.

"We get a lot of promises, especially around election time. But then nobody does anything about it, so what good are all these words and promises?"





The full article contains 722 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 02 June 2008 10:27 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Bewildered in South Dakota,

South Dakota 03/06/2008 02:27:01
Do they realize that over half do not even vote?
2

Guga II,

Rockall 03/06/2008 04:10:45
Typical politicians. They'll chase after various groups of people, then forget all about them as soon as the elections are over.

In any event, I wouldn't have thought that American Indians would have much faith in any politician in their country.
3

Guga II,

Rockall 03/06/2008 04:20:48
Mr. Editor, I notice your Pravda Branch and Xinhua Branch censors are allowing virtually no comments on stories in the international section. Why is this?

Also, you coverage of the American prison and torture ships as abysmal as, among other things, it omits to mention that, by their own admission, the American Government is currently detaining at least 26,000 people without trial in secret prisons, and information suggests up to 80,000 have been 'through the system' since 2001.


4

right of center,

Chicago 03/06/2008 11:20:53
3 Guga II

Good to see you still enjoy trashing the United States with wild rumors.
5

Carolyn 1,

03/06/2008 12:31:54
The Indians are a powerful lobby in the U.S. and because of it, that power goes back to the roots of the people who create and sustain the lobby
6

Carolyn 1,

03/06/2008 12:33:44
GugaII

As for the 'prison ships' the article is written by the lawyer who represents about 50 of the terrorists at Gitmo. And, yup, you guessed it, he's got a book he's trying very hard to peddle.
7

Guga II,

Rockall 03/06/2008 14:07:53
#4 & #6. Your comments have nothing to do with the admission by your government that it is still detaining at least 26,000 people without trial in secret prisons. Nor that up to 80,000 have been 'through the system' since 2001.
8

Carolyn 1,

03/06/2008 14:18:20
@7 Guga
If they're secret, how do you know about them?
9

Lynne,

Palm Beach Gardens 03/06/2008 14:22:28
Your comments have nothing to do with the Democrats or the Native Americans.
10

Lynne,

Palm Beach Gardens 03/06/2008 15:02:21
Carolyn1...good morning..I guess if the Pentagon says these reports are inaccurate..the anit-US brigade could care less. They will just go on rpeating rumors without the denials.
11

Lynne,

Palm Beach Gardens 03/06/2008 15:02:59
supposed to read...anti-US brigade.
12

Sandi,

San Diego 03/06/2008 17:00:48
Hillary has a good chance of winning South Dakota. An ARG poll that came out yesterday has her at 60% and Obama at 34%. In Montana, he has 48%, Hillary has 44% with 8% undecided.

http://americanresearchgroup.com/

These are small states, but at this point in a primary race, voters are usually going heavily in favor of the winning candidate. This is not happening this year with the Democrats. Every primary has Obama's support getting less and Hillary's getting stronger. The more people find out about Obama, the less they like him.
13

Lynne,

Palm Beach Gardens 03/06/2008 20:58:33
The words "power of the press"..has never meant more than it does now. Because it was the press that had Obama elected for this nomination. Not the will of the people, not by the numbers, but by the press. They have crammed this man down our throats and he hasn't said anything about what he is doing that is different from Hillary!!
I am glad, I am no longer a Democrat.
14

Lynne,

Palm Beach Gardens 03/06/2008 21:03:02
As I am writing this Hillary has said she is not conceding anything and the AP has it wrong. Who should we believe? And how did the AP get the story?
15

Twila WhiteBear,

Fort Hal, Idaho 05/06/2008 00:55:54
I'm a member of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes in Idaho and I'm very skeptical of the candidates myself. I don't have much faith in the federal system. The government has a responsiblity to the Native people of this land. It isn't because we are owed something it's because treaties exist with former president's and they should be honored. Treaties exist and should not be disregarded. Our old chiefs signed these agreements in good faith with the presidents. If the president seat is supposed to be a position with honor I haven't seen that since Kennedy. He is a hero to the Native people as well as Mr. William Clinton for protecting our way of prayer. Mrs. Clinton is a whole different story. I for one will not judge her because of her husbands accomplishment or failures. She must stand on her own and show us what she's made of.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.