Update: At the business meeting this morning, Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) decided to pull the bill after he and Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-North Dakota) met with Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales on Tuesday. He said Kempthorne and Gonzales pledged to work with the Senate Indian Affairs Committee to resolve the Cobell case. He said the committee will work over the August recess with the administration, the Cobell plaintiffs and Indian Country to draft a bill that would provide a comprehensive settlement to Indian trust claims.
An attorney for the Cobell trust fund lawsuit feared a $8 billion settlement to the case was "dead" after Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) pulled the bill from consideration on Tuesday.
The Senate Indian Affairs Committee, which McCain chairs, was due to take up S.1439, the Indian Trust Reform Act, at a business meeting this morning. But it was abruptly removed from the agenda yesterday afternoon.
Keith Harper, a member of the Cherokee Nation, said
the delay -- the second in the last two weeks -- has
effectively put an end to efforts to settle the 10-year-old case.
Lawmakers are about to go on a one-month break later
this week and will be consumed by the upcoming
elections and other urgent matters once they return.
"There's no time left in the legislative calendar,"
Harper said in an interview. "The bill, from our end, is dead."
McCain had told the Cobell plaintiffs and the Bush
administration last month that his trust reform package
would resolve the case for $8 billion. A provision in the
bill was expected to allow individual Indians to continue
to pursue their claims if they desire.
But lukewarm reception from the Bush administration prompted
McCain to step back, Harper and two other Capitol Hill sources said.
"It's the administration that has the problem with it, it's
not the plaintiffs," said one Washington, D.C., lawyer.
Harper said it was a mistake for McCain to wait for any sort of
response from the Interior Department
"If the administration's sign off is a necessary precondition
for the committee to go forward on the bill," he said,
"then we're going to be waiting a long time."
New Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne has told tribal leaders
across the nation that he wanted to settle. But
senior officials, many of whom have remained on
board even after the departure of former secretary Gale Norton,
have openly balked at a large dollar figure for the case.
The officials include Jim Cason, the associate deputy secretary;
David Bernhardt, the deputy solicitor; and Ross Swimmer,
the Special Trustee for American Indians.
In Congressional testimony and public statements,
officials have said Indian beneficiaries are owed a very small
amount, possibly in the low millions.
McCain had indicated he was going to go forward whether or not
the Cobell plaintiffs of Interior agreed. When he took over
the Senate committee in early 2005, he pledged to give
the issue "one good shot."
"If it looks like we're not getting anywhere," he said back in
March 2005, "then I will leave that task to future Congresses and the courts."
It's not clear why McCain may have changed his mind. But he
will address the delay when the committee meets this morning,
The Arizona Republic reported.
Another bill to recognize six Virginia tribes was also taken off
the agenda. Three other measures, including one to recognize
the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, will be considered as originally
scheduled.
McCain is stepping down as chairman of the committee at the end of the year.
He has drawn some criticism for focusing most of his energies on
the Jack Abramoff scandal and Indian gaming. About half of the
hearings he called focused or were related to those topics.
Business Meeting Notice:
Pending
committee issues (August 2, 2006)
Indian Trust Reform Act:
S.1439
| H.R.4322
Relevant Links:
Senate Indian Affairs Committee - http://indian.senate.gov
Indian Trust: Cobell v. Kempthorne - http://www.indiantrust.com
Office
of Special Trustee - http://www.ost.doi.gov
Cobell v. Norton, Department of Justice - http://www.usdoj.gov/civil/cases/cobell/index.htm
Cobell settlement bill pulled from Senate consideration
Wednesday, August 2, 2006
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