The Cherokee Nation is again calling on Congress to deliver on a 200-year-old promise
The Cherokee Nation is again calling on Congress to deliver on a 200-year-old promise
The Cherokee Nation is renewing its campaign for representation in Congress, calling on federal legislators to honor a treaty that the US government made nearly 200 years ago.
In a video released last week, the tribal nation reasserted its demand that Congress seat its delegate in the House of Representatives a right stipulated by the 1835 Treaty of New Echota.
Under the treaty, brokered between the US government and a minority group of Cherokee leaders who claimed to represent the tribe, the Cherokee were ultimately made to give up their ancestral land in the South and relocate to present-day Oklahoma. Though a majority of the Cherokee people including then-Principal Chief John Ross opposed the treaty, it was ratified in 1836. About a quarter of the tribes population died of disease, starvation and exhaustion on the resulting journey now known as the Trail of Tears.
In exchange for their homelands, the Cherokee were promised $5 million, new land and other provisions, among them a delegate in the House of Representatives. For two centuries, Congress has failed to honor that promise, Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. said in the video, referring to the delegate. However, the Treaty of New Echota has no expiration date. The obligation to seat a Cherokee Nation delegate is as binding today as it was in 1835.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/27/us/cherokee-nation-push-for-congress-delegate-cec/index.html
It would set a bad precedent. Imagine if the US had to start honoring all of those treaties?