August 15, 2018

Udall Requests Kavanaugh Records on Native American Issues

 

For Immediate Release

August 15, 2018

Contact: Ned Adriance

202.228.6870 | news@tomudall.senate.gov|  @SenatorTomUdall

 

WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senator Tom Udall (D-N.M.), vice chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, formally requested all records pertaining to Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s involvement with Native American issues during his tenure as White House Staff Secretary and as White House Counsel.

 

In a letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Udall asked Grassley to turn over all records under his control pertaining to Kavanaugh’s work on Indian Affairs issues. Udall also asked that Grassley request all records from the National Archives regarding Kavanaugh’s time as Staff Secretary and White House Counsel related to Native American matters.

 

“Decisions made by the Supreme Court have a significant impact on nearly all aspects of the everyday lives of Native Americans,” Udall wrote. “In the past few years alone, the Supreme Court has ruled on cases that further defined the contours of the United States’ government-to-government relationship with Indian Tribes, including: the extent to which an Indian Tribe’s treaty with the United States protects its subsistence practices from state intrusion; the scope of an Indian Tribe’s sovereign immunity; and the scope and extent of a Tribal member’s parental rights over a Native American child.”

 

“The Supreme Court’s influence is particularly acute in Indian Country, given the United States’ treaty and trust responsibility,” Udall continued. “So that members of this Committee—and the entire Senate—may adequately consider Judge Kavanaugh’s views on Indian Affairs issues, I respectfully request that you make available to me and my staff all records that pertain to Judge Kavanaugh’s involvement with Native American affairs while serving at the White House as Staff Secretary and as White House Counsel.”

 

The full text of the letter is available below and here.

 

The Honorable Charles E. Grassley

Chairman

Committee on the Judiciary

United States Senate

224 Dirksen Senate Building

Washington, DC 20510

 

Dear Chairman Grassley:

 

I am writing to respectfully request that you share with me and my staff all records under your control pertaining to Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s involvement in any Native American matters during his tenure at the White House as Staff Secretary and as White House Counsel.  I also respectfully ask that you request all records from the National Archives regarding Judge Kavanaugh’s time as Staff Secretary and as White House counsel related to Native American matters and share those with me and my Staff.  As the Committee responsible for overseeing Indian Affairs, the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs must have Judge Kavanaugh’s record so we may perform our constitutional duties with the thought and care necessary to advise the President. 

 

Decisions made by the Supreme Court have a significant impact on nearly all aspects of the everyday lives of Native Americans.  In the past few years alone, the Supreme Court has ruled on cases that further defined the contours of the United States’ government-to-government relationship with Indian Tribes, including the extent to which an Indian Tribe’s treaty with the United States protects its subsistence practices from state intrusion;  the scope of an Indian Tribe’s sovereign immunity;   and the scope and extent of a Tribal member’s parental rights over a Native American child.   Just this year, the Court upheld legislation that this Committee duly considered and reported favorably, the Gun Lake Restoration Act,  the repercussions of which extend far beyond Indian Affairs and go to the core of Congress’s role in shaping the Judiciary’s jurisdiction.   This upcoming term is no different with respect to the Supreme Court’s profound influence on Indian Affairs, having granted petitions for certiorari in three cases — treaty hunting rights,  taxation of tribal members,  and how the United States defines reservation boundaries.  

 

The Supreme Court’s influence is particularly acute in Indian Country, given the United States’ treaty and trust responsibility.  Access to Judge Kavanaugh’s record relating to Native American matters, both currently under your control and within the National Archives, is therefore critical for the members of this Committee—and the entire Senate—to adequately fulfill our constitutional obligation to advise the President on his nominee.

 

Please contact my staff director on the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, Jennifer Romero, at (202) 224-2251 or via email at jennifer_romero@indian.senate.gov with any questions.

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