Todd Palin No Poster Boy for Yup'ik Eskimos or Other Native  Alaskans 
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson 

There was the ever  so fleeting moment during her speech at the Republican 
National Convention when  Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin 
paid tribute to hubby Todd.  She lightly mentioned that he’s of Yup’ik Eskimo 
background. Todd Palin beamed  with pride at the acknowledgement in front of 
the 
packed convention crowd and in  front one of the largest TV audiences to ever 
watch a candidate’s convention  speech. But the cheering convention 
participants and millions of viewers won’t  see the same smiles on scores of 
other of 
Palin’s Yup’ik Eskimos and many other  Native Alaskans. 

They make up nearly 20 percent of Alaska’s  population. A devastating report 
by the Alaska Advisory Committee to the U.S.  Civil Rights Commission in 2002, 
“Racism’s Frontier: The Untold Story of  Discrimination and Division in 
Alaska” painted a picture of decades long  economic misery, discrimination, 
neglect and alienation for Native Alaskans in  Palin’s state. 

VP candidate Palin boasted that she squeezed the  oil and gas industry for 
billions that have enriched the state’s businesses,  residents, and boosted 
employment in some communities. That prosperity hasn’t  touched many Native 
Alaskans. Overall one fifth of Native Alaskans are below the  poverty line. In 
some 
rural villages their jobless rate tops 80 percent. Despite  sheaths of 
anti-discrimination laws, and even an affirmative action plan for  special 
needs 
military veterans, on the books in Alaska, discrimination against  Native 
Alaskans 
is rampant. 

The Alaska Human Rights Commission  notes that discrimination complaints 
jumped more than fifty percent in a seven  year period in the late 1990s. Many 
of 
those complaints didn’t come from Native  Alaskans. Native Alaskan leaders 
bluntly told a civil rights commission  community forum in 2001 that they 
simply 
didn’t trust the system. 

Native Alaskans are more likely to be sicker and have less access to  
quality, affordable health care than whites. Their infant mortality is more 
than  
double that of whites. Their tuberculosis rate is more than twenty times higher 
 
than whites. Civil rights commission studies attributed the appalling health  
statistics to overcrowded and insufficiently ventilated housing, impure water  
supplies, inadequate waste disposal systems, and general malnutrition.  

The racial disparities between Native Alaskans and whites are  even more 
glaring in public education and the criminal justice system. Native  Alaskans 
are 
slightly more than 12 percent of the state’s public school  students. They 
make up more than one quarter of school drop-outs, and are at  rock bottom in 
their achievement scores in reading and math. Native Alaskans  make up a paltry 
five percent of the teachers and administrators. Many of the  students are 
taught exclusively by white teachers in grossly under-funded rural  public 
schools. Many of the teachers have little understanding of or sensitivity  to 
Aleut, 
Yup'ik, and Indian culture and language. 
Then there are the  soaring prison numbers. Native Alaskan males make up less 
than ten percent of  the state’s population, but are nearly forty percent of 
those behind bars.  Despite the outsized disproportionate jail numbers, the 
civil rights commission  found that Native Alaskans are underrepresented in 
jobs 
in the child welfare  system, legal system, and juvenile justice system. 

The criminal  justice system disparities are a double edged sword for Native 
Alaskans. While  they are far more likely to be incarcerated than whites, they 
are also far more  likely than whites to suffer rape, domestic violence and 
homicide. Native  Alaskans bitterly complain of laxity by the police and the 
courts in finding and  punishing those who victimize Native Alaskans. Many 
homicides of Native Alaskans  have remained unsolved. 

The violence rate against Native Alaskans  is so high that some violence 
prevention experts say that some of the crimes  against Native Alaskans could 
be t
agged as hate crimes. Alaska state legislators  for a brief time toyed with 
the idea of enacting a hate crimes law with greater  sentencing enhancements. 
That went nowhere. Even if the legislature had acted,  Governor Palin gave a 
strong hint what its fate would likely be if it landed on  her desk. During the 
2006 gubernatorial campaign she told the Eagle Forum that  she opposed expanded 
hate crime legislation. She branded all heinous crimes as  hate crimes. 

State Equal Rights Commission officials have  complained that the legislature 
gutted the commission’s budget and cut staff.  Their complaints fell on deaf 
ears. Despite the well documented widespread  discrimination and disparities 
against Native Alaskans there is no public record  that Governor Palin has gone 
to bat for increased funding for the Commission.  

In report on the plight of Native Alaskans, the U.S. Civil Rights  Commission 
called for massive increases in spending on job and skills training  and 
programs to boost employment, improve education and public services. The  
commission called for sweeping reforms in the criminal justice and health care  
systems. The recommendations were made four years before Palin took office.  
Other 
than a brief mention of diversity in her gubernatorial campaign speech in  
2006, there is no evidence that Palin has said or done anything about the  
commission’s recommendations. If she had it would have put a beam on the faces  
of 
thousands of Yup’ik Eskimos who aren’t named Todd Palin. 

Earl Ofari  Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His new book is 
The Ethnic  Presidency: How Race Decides the Race to the White House (Middle 
Passage Press,  February 2008). 





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