FROM THE ARCHIVE
A BIA critic won't run for president in '04
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TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2003 Senator Chris Dodd (D-Connecticut), a critic of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, said on Monday he would not seek the Democratic nomination for president in 2004. Dodd is a primary sponsor of a bill to reform federal recognition. He has another bill to offer grants to local governments that want to participate in federal recognition or land-into-trust decisions. Get the Story:
Dodd Stays Out Of Race For President (The Hartford Courant 3/4)
Dodd Rules Out Bid For Presidency (The New London Day 3/4)
Countering a Trend, Dodd Won't Join Democratic Field (The Washington Post 3/4)
Dodd rules out White House run (AP 3/4) Relevant Links:
Sen. Chris Dodd - http://dodd.senate.gov Related Stories:
Senators say no moratorium in recognition bill (3/3)
New recognition reform bill is not 'anti-Indian' (2/27)
Lack of evidence addressed in recognition bill (02/19)
Sweeping recognition reform bill offered (02/07)
At BIA, no recognition of new tribes (2/5)
Trust programs see historic increase (2/4)
Troubled Indian programs prompt GAO criticism (01/31)
BIA recognition still hard to prove for some (01/22)
McCaleb latest in long line of DOI departures (11/25)
McCaleb changed, yes, but little else did (11/22)
McCaleb delivers aggressive recognition plan (10/03)
BIA role in recognition decisions under review (06/13)
Dropping performance blamed on weak leadership (04/08)
BIA Budget: Doing more with less (3/26)
Bush budget cuts funds for new tribes (3/20)
McCaleb takes on recognition (3/15)
Inside the BIA, plenty of drama (3/4)
Ashcroft urged to charge BIA officials (3/1)
Solutions sought for 'hijacked' recognition (11/9)
Gover: Recognition study 'cooked' (11/1)
Reforming federal recognition (10/26)
Gover takes on recognition (10/25)
McCaleb to listen 'closely' to recognition experts (8/9)
McCaleb decision sure to draw scrutiny (7/31)
BIA pushed to provide 'answers' on tribes (7/26)
McCaleb endorses BIA on recognition (6/14)
Gover's 'activist' legacy escapes McCaleb (6/13)
BIA has small goal for big problem (5/22)
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