Combating Domestic Violence
During Domestic Violence Awareness Month, we recognize the unacceptable existence of domestic violence in communities across the nation, and we join in strong support of victims and survivors. While this is a sobering time of awareness, it is also a timely reminder for Congress to act on legislation to renew resources for states, local and tribal governments to combat and prevent domestic violence.
Twenty-five years ago, lawmakers in Congress came together to pass and the president signed into law the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), which provided hope and support for victims and survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault. In the years since then, various VAWA programs administered by the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) have helped communities and law enforcement address crimes of domestic violence. Rightly so, with each five-year reauthorization, VAWA has sought to improve upon and strengthen the tools available for combating violence against women and vulnerable populations.
Unfortunately, VAWA’s authorization expired in February of this year, causing uncertainty for the entities stewarding resources. While the Senate still has not brought up legislation to reauthorize VAWA, I was encouraged that the House did so in April.
Certainly, there were provisions in the House bill with which I profoundly disagreed. But as a tribal member and supporter of tribal sovereignty, I also recognized the value of several provisions consistent with my voting record on tribal issues and views regarding the protection of Native women and children. Indeed, reauthorization of VAWA is critically important to Indian Country. According to a 2016 study by DOJ’s National Institute of Justice, it is estimated that more than four out of five American Indian and Alaska Native women have experienced violence in their lifetimes, and more than half have experienced sexual violence. Native women are more than one and half times more likely than White women to have experienced violence in the past year. Even more chilling, Native women face murder rates more than 10 times the national average in some parts of the country; they are also nearly twice as likely to have experienced rape than non-Hispanic White women over the course of their lifetimes.“SOVEREIGNTY AND NATIVE WOMENS SAFETY”: “We need reauthorization in the Senate,” says Rep. Tom Cole (R-Oklahoma) at rally for Violence Against Women Act at US Capitol. #VAWA #MMIW @ncai @niwrc @TomColeOK04 pic.twitter.com/qv9kRWawfw
— indianz.com (@indianz) September 11, 2019
Tom Cole, a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation, is serving
his eighth term in Congress as the elected representative of Oklahoma's 4th
Congressional District. He is recognized as an advocate for taxpayers and small
business, a proponent for a strong national defense and a leader in promoting
biomedical research. He is considered the foremost expert in the House on issues
dealing with Native Americans and tribal governments. He and his wife, Ellen,
have one son, Mason, and reside in Moore, Oklahoma.
Join the Conversation