Hi,

Almost 200 years ago, the federal government made a promise to the Cherokee, and now it’s time to see it through.1 Click here if you agree: Give the Cherokee Nation a delegate to Congress!

A 1835 treaty between the Cherokee nation and the US government guaranteed that the Cherokee nation could send a delegate to Congress. But for almost 200 years the US failed to live up to its end of the promise. Now, the Cherokee nation is asking for a delegate2, and Demand Progress, along with other social justice groups, are showing solidarity by echoing the call.

Sign the petition: Give the Cherokee nation a delegate in Congress!

Let’s face it: the US has a long track record of not honoring treaties with Indigenous tribes.3 And that’s in addition to the atrocities like the forced removal of indigenous people from their lands and the horrors of residential boarding schools.

We can’t change the past but we can forge a new future. Having a delegate representing the Cherokee nation in Congress will give Indigenous people a stronger voice in public policy at a time when it’s badly needed. Climate change, a mega-drought in the American southwest, and years of disinvestment from the US government will have major impacts on indigenous people,4 their ability to access water, and provide basic necessities for their families.

Already DC, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands have delegates in Congress. A Cherokee delegate would be no different, except for the fact that they were promised a seat at Congress almost 200 years ago and never got it.

A promise is a promise. It’s time for Congress to make this right.

Sign the petition: Give the Cherokee nation a delegate in Congress!

Thanks for taking action,

Tihi and the team at Demand Progress

Sources:
1. NPR, “The Cherokee Nation is renewing its push for a nonvoting delegate in Congress,” September 24, 2022.
2. Ibid.
3. The History Channel, “Broken Treaties With Native American Tribes: Timeline,” November 10, 2020.
4. New York Times, “In Arizona, Drought Ignites Tensions and Threatens Traditions Among the Hopi,” November 5, 2015.


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