The Cherokee Nation Is Entitled to a Delegate in Congress. But Will They Finally Send One? January 15, 2017 To deal with a Trump administration, the tribal nation might now want to use that 200-year-old treaty right. View Full Screen Visit External Site CherokeeCherokee ConstitutionCherokee NationChoctawCivil RightsCongressional DelegateDakota Access PipelineFederal Indian Lawnative leadershipTreaty of HopewellTreaty of New Echotatribal delegateU.S. Constitution 0 comment 0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest previous post Nader Calls for a New 1 Percent next post Standing Rock and the Return of the Nonviolent Campaign You may also like Food Waste: We are the Problem and the... April 2, 2017 Automakers Urge Trump to Undo One of America’s... April 2, 2017 The Superrich Have Profited From a Broken System—And... March 23, 2017 How Chicago Became the First City to Make... March 23, 2017 No surprise. State Department will approve construction of... March 23, 2017 House leaders postpone vote on their health-care plan... March 23, 2017 Food Is Just One Serving Of What Meals... March 23, 2017 Rise Of The Robot Bees: Tiny Drones Turned... March 13, 2017 As opioid overdoses rise, police officers become counselors,... March 13, 2017 Inside Trump’s fury: The president rages at leaks,... March 6, 2017