Heather Kendall-Miller & Lloyd Miller: GOP candidate a threat to Native rights

From Indianz:

Now that the primary is over and Dan Sullivan is the Republican nominee running against Alaska Senator Mark Begich, it’s time to closely examine his record on issues of import to Alaska Natives. The Native community has long assessed political candidates based on their positions on subsistence, tribal sovereignty, Indian child welfare, and voting rights. In each of these areas, Dan Sullivan’s record is clear: he is a staunch opponent of Native rights.

Perhaps no issue is of greater importance to Alaska Native people than the right to hunt and fish according to ancient customary and traditional practices, and to pass on the subsistence way of life to future generations. Dan Sullivan has aggressively opposed subsistence interests through litigation, legislative initiatives, and support for state policies that marginalize tribal voices.

As Governor Sarah Palin’s Attorney General, Sullivan waged war on subsistence rights by carrying on the Katie John litigation and seeking to overturn a prior court decision affirming the federal government’s retained authority to manage subsistence fisheries in Alaska. As most Alaskans know, Katie John was a revered Ahtna elder who fought tenaciously to protect her right to subsistence fish on her Native allotment in the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve.

Attorney General Sullivan joined the ranks of past Indian fighters who argued that the subsistence protections established under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act should be narrowed to exclude vast stretches of Alaska waters from subsistence fishing, in favor of sport and commercial fishing. Had it been successful, the appeal would have dismantled the Federal Subsistence Board’s authority to prioritize subsistence fishing over other uses when resources become limited. Fortunately, both the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court rejected the state’s attack.

Sullivan’s hostility to Native interests continued when Governor Sean Parnell moved Sullivan over to be the Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Natural Resources. As Commissioner, Sullivan led the charge in adopting a new Bristol Bay Area Plan which reclassified land use planning for state land at the Pebble Mine deposit as solely mineral land, omitting any land use for subsistence hunting and fishing purposes in an area central to subsistence in southwest Alaska.

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