Native American Vote-Suppression Scandal Escalates    
  
Stephanie WoodardAugust 5, 2013Huffington Post 

"Right now, most Indians in South Dakota get one day to vote, Election Day, 
when precincts are set up on reservations; meanwhile, other voters have several 
weeks," said civil-rights leader OJ Semans, a Rosebud Sioux who co-directs Four 
Directions. "That's not equal access."      
   A portion of a 50-plus-mile round trip some Sioux currently make to 
early-vote off their reservation--if impoverished tribal members can find 
transport or gas money. Other Sioux may travel 100 miles or more., Stephanie 
Woodard,         
   South Dakota has devised an ingenious new way to curb minority voting. For 
decades, suppressing the Native American vote here has involved activities that 
might not surprise those who follow enfranchisement issues: last-minute changes 
to Indian-reservation polling places, asking Native voters for ID that isn't 
required, confronting them in precinct parking lots and tailing them from the 
polls and recording their license-plate numbers. The state and jurisdictions 
within it have fought and lost some 20 Native voting-rights lawsuits; a major 
suit is still before the courts. Two South Dakota counties were subject to U.S. 
Department of Justice oversight until June of this year. 
That's when the Supreme Court struck down a portion of the Voting Rights Act of 
1965, saying, "Today, our Nation has changed." 
Yes, it has. The VRA decision provided an opening for those who are 
uncomfortable when minorities, the poor and other marginalized citizens vote. 
Since the decision, new measures to limit enfranchisement have swept the 
country -- mostly gerrymandering and restrictions on allowable voter IDs. 
South Dakota's secretary of state and top elections official Jason Gant is a 
step ahead of the pack. He will ask the federal Election Assistance Commission 
if it's okay to use Help America Vote Act funds to pay for early-voting polling 
places on three Indian reservations. Such facilities, which the state has 
already spent HAVA funds on for two other reservations, cost about $15,000 per 
election. If the new ones are approved, the money would come from the $9 
million in HAVA appropriations the state has in interest-bearing accounts 
earning hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. 
Voting-rights group Four Directions made the early-voting request on behalf of 
three South Dakota Sioux tribes during the July 31 meeting of the state's Board 
of Elections. With the polling places, tribal members would cast ballots closer 
to home during the 46-day period when South Dakota allows voting ahead of 
Election Day. Shown above is a portion of a 50-plus-mile round trip some Sioux 
currently make to early-vote off their reservation--if impoverished tribal 
members can find transport or gas money. Other Sioux may travel 100 miles or 
more. 
"Right now, most Indians in South Dakota get one day to vote, Election Day, 
when precincts are set up on reservations; meanwhile, other voters have several 
weeks," said civil-rights leader OJ Semans, a Rosebud Sioux who co-directs Four 
Directions. "That's not equal access." Semans is shown below, second from 
right, discussing early voting with county officials.  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
At this point, you are probably wondering why asking a federal agency for 
advice is so very clever. It's because the Election Assistance Commission no 
longer has any staff whatsoever tasked to respond to such a query, according to 
EAC spokesperson Bryan Whitener. He wrote in an email, "Questions that require 
advisory opinions regarding HAVA funds are decided by a vote of the 
commissioners. At this point, EAC is without commissioners." A look at the 
EAC's website reveals a several-year backlog of unanswered questions. 
Better yet, Gant knows -- and may have long known -- that a query to the EAC 
would disappear into the void. Soon after the July 31 meeting, the national 
American Indian news source, Indian Country Today Media Network, the AP and 
several South Dakota media outlets reported that Gant is an officer of the 
National Association of Secretaries of State, which voted in 2011 to support 
disbanding the EAC. 
As the scandal accelerates with articles, blog posts and radio and television 
talk shows on the subject appearing in South Dakota and around the country, 
Gant insists that the moribund EAC is the arbiter of the Native early-voting 
question. In an August 2 statement, he said, "The EAC can either say yes, no, 
or they may issue no response... I will not use HAVA funds unless it is clearly 
defined that I can do so." 
Four Directions consultant Bret Healy called Gant's reliance on the EAC 
"troubling," given the secretary of state's involvement with the commission's 
demise. Healy added that any request for advice sent to the EAC was a "dead 
letter." 
Linda Lea Viken, a Rapid City attorney and elections board member since 1999, 
said she was startled by the turn of events, especially since board members had 
pressed Gant during the July 31 meeting about when the EAC might reply and he 
gave no indication that the answer was, in all likelihood, never. 
In an email to Secretary Gant, Viken asked, "May I ask, when did you first 
become aware that the EAC is not fully staffed and hasn't issued a decision for 
several years?" 
At another point, Viken queried Gant, "In light of the information the board 
has now [received] about the futility of such a request, what do you propose? 
We certainly don't want these folks to be in limbo for years. They have been 
seeking this decision for a long time, and we should not be dismissive of their 
request." 
County elections official and elections board member Patty McGee saw things 
differently. McGee, who has served on the EAC's federal Standards Board, told 
the state group on July 31, "We've given them several opportunities to vote." 
Later, she told this reporter for an Indian Country Today Media Network 
article, "A person has to make an effort." 
Healy noted that having some -- but not all -- ways to vote does not constitute 
equality. He also referred to Natives as a "protected class" of voters, as 
defined by the permanent sections of the Voting Rights Act, which were not 
struck down and remain in effect. Because Native Americans have historically 
had less opportunity to participate in the electoral process and have been 
subject to official discrimination, any abridgment of their rights draws 
special scrutiny. 
Separately, at the request of U.S. Senator Tim Johnson (D-S.D.), the 
nonpartisan Congressional Research Service has analyzed the relevant 
regulations and opined that it appears South Dakota's HAVA funds can properly 
be used for early voting, also called in-person absentee voting. Gant and the 
state elections board had this information for the July 31 meeting. 
Gant is sticking to his guns: "We need to see what the EAC response is and 
proceed with the next step at that time." 
According to Viken, the state elections board acts as an appeals panel for HAVA 
issues within South Dakota and can clarify the state's HAVA plan when 
necessary. She wants the state board to revisit the Indian-reservation 
early-voting issue. Said Viken, "It's always good for us to be refreshed on our 
responsibilities under the law." 
Photograph by Stephanie Woodard. This article was produced with support from 
the George Polk Center for Investigative Reporting. c. Stephanie Woodard 
(Writer on human rights and culture.)       
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