Current:Home > StocksNative Americans in Montana ask court for more in-person voting sites -Wealthify
Native Americans in Montana ask court for more in-person voting sites
View
Date:2025-04-14 01:34:37
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Native Americans living on a remote Montana reservation filed a lawsuit against state and county officials Monday saying they don’t have enough places to vote in person — the latest chapter in a decades-long struggle by tribes in the United States over equal voting opportunities.
The six members of the Fort Peck Reservation want satellite voting offices in their communities for late registration and to vote before Election Day without making long drives to a county courthouse.
The legal challenge, filed in state court, comes five weeks before the presidential election in a state with a a pivotal U.S. Senate race where the Republican candidate has made derogatory comments about Native Americans.
Native Americans were granted U.S. citizenship a century ago. Advocates say the right still doesn’t always bring equal access to the ballot.
Many tribal members in rural western states live in far-flung communities with limited resources and transportation. That can make it hard to reach election offices, which in some cases are located off-reservation.
The plaintiffs in the Montana lawsuit reside in two small communities near the Canada border on the Fort Peck Reservation, home to the Assiniboine and Sioux tribes. Plaintiffs’ attorney Cher Old Elk grew up in one of those communities, Frazer, Montana, where more than a third of people live below the poverty line and the per capita income is about $12,000, according to census data.
It’s a 60-mile round trip from Frazer to the election office at the courthouse in Glasgow. Old Elk says that can force prospective voters into difficult choices.
“It’s not just the gas money; it’s actually having a vehicle that runs,” she said. “Is it food on my table, or is it the gas money to find a vehicle, to find a ride, to go to Glasgow to vote?”
The lawsuit asks a state judge for an order forcing Valley and Roosevelt counties and Secretary of State Christi Jacobson to create satellite election offices in Frazer and Poplar, Montana. They would be open during the same hours and on the same days as the county courthouses.
The plaintiffs requested satellite election offices from the counties earlier this year, the lawsuit says. Roosevelt County officials refused, while Valley County officials said budget constraints limited them to opening a satellite voting center for just one day.
Valley County Attorney Dylan Jensen said there were only two full-time employees in the Clerk and Recorder’s Office that oversees elections, so staffing a satellite office would be problematic.
“To do that for an extended period of time and still keep regular business going, it would be difficult,” he said.
Roosevelt County Clerk and Recorder Tracy Miranda and a spokesperson for Jacobson did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment.
Prior efforts to secure Native American voting rights helped drive changes in recent years that expanded electoral access for tribal members in South Dakota and Nevada.
A 2012 federal lawsuit in Montana sought to establish satellite election offices on the Crow, Northern Cheyenne and Fort Belknap reservations. It was rejected by a judge, but the ruling was later set aside by an appeals court. In 2014, tribal members in the case reached a settlement with officials in several counties.
Monday’s lawsuit said inequities continue on the Fort Peck Reservation, and that tribal members have never fully achieved equal voting since Montana was first organized as a territory in 1864 and Native Americans were excluded from its elections. Native voters in subsequent years continued to face barriers to registering and were sometimes stricken from voter rolls.
“It’s unfortunate we had to take a very aggressive step, to take this to court, but the counties aren’t doing it. I don’t know any other way,” Old Elk said.
veryGood! (38947)
Related
- Police remove gator from pool in North Carolina town: Watch video of 'arrest'
- Dexter Scott King remembered during memorial as keeper of his father Martin Luther King, Jr.'s dream
- Usher and Longtime Love Jenn Goicoechea Get Marriage License Ahead of Super Bowl Halftime Show
- Kristin Juszczyk is in a league of her own creating NFL merchandise women actually wear
- Residents in Alaska capital clean up swamped homes after an ice dam burst and unleashed a flood
- Why do Super Bowl tickets cost so much? Inside the world of NFL pricing, luxury packages, and ticket brokers with bags of cash
- NYC imposing curfew at more migrant shelters following recent violent incidents
- ATV breaks through ice and plunges into lake, killing 88-year-old fisherman in Maine
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- This early Super Bowl commercial from Cetaphil is making everyone, including Swifties, cry
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- See Patrick Mahomes and Wife Brittany's Adorable Family Moments On and Off the Field
- Drop Everything Now and See Taylor Swift Cheer on Travis Kelce at Super Bowl 2024
- Vanderpump Rules Alum Brittany Cartwright Shares Insight Into Weight Loss Transformation
- The Daily Money: Disney+ wants your dollars
- No one hurt when small plane makes crash landing on residential street in suburban Phoenix
- Andy Reid changes the perception of him, one 'nuggies' ad at a time
- ‘Lisa Frankenstein’ fails to revive North American box office on a very slow Super Bowl weekend
Recommendation
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
Taylor Swift planning to watch Travis Kelce and the Chiefs play 49ers in the Super Bowl
Two-legged Puppy Bowl star Mr. Bean steals a 'Bachelor' heart on his hind legs
$50K award offered for information about deaths of 3 endangered gray wolves in Oregon
RFK Jr. closer to getting on New Jersey ballot after judge rules he didn’t violate ‘sore loser’ law
Usher and Longtime Love Jenn Goicoechea Get Marriage License Ahead of Super Bowl Halftime Show
Former officer pleads not guilty to murder in fatal police shooting
Trump says he warned NATO ally: Spend more on defense or Russia can ‘do whatever the hell they want’