Cronkite News
WASHINGTON – If anyone thought it strange that the top two elected officials in the Navajo Nation were speaking at competing political conventions, Navajo Vice President Myron Lizer said they have not been paying attention.
“There’s no secret we are a split ticket,” Lizer said during a Navajo town hall
Tuesday with President Jonathan Nez. “We are working both sides, and we are well represented in Washington.”
Lizer’s comments came as he was getting ready to address the Republican National Convention, just one week after Nez was featured as a “rising star” who helped deliver the keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention.
But Lizer credited Trump for delivering “the largest financial funding package ever to Indian Country.” “The $8 billion in CARES Act funding to Indian County was a great start in alleviating the devastating effects that the COVID-19 pandemic has inflicted on our Indian tribes,” he said. “The Navajo Nation once led the nation in per capita positive cases because of the health disparities that previous administrations failed to improve.” Lizer ran through a list of what he saw as other administration successes, including the creation of a task force on missing and murdered Indigenous women and by “nominating strong conservative judges like (Supreme Court Justice) Neil Gorsuch, who supports Native American rights.” While Lizer and Nez have different perspectives, those differences don’t seem to spill over into their work lives: The two men often appear together, they issue tribal statements under the president’s and vice president’s names and they even share a Facebook account for their offices. Bill Scheel, partner at Javelina Consulting, said it’s not unusual for Navajo presidential tickets to be split ticket, and not surprising. “I really think, from a Navajo perspective, it makes sense,” Scheel said. “So much of their fate is tied up with the federal government, so they really need to maintain good relations with both parties.” Scheel said the fact that the two men can work together may be helped by the fact that their offices are not that partisan to begin with.Navajo Nation Vice President Myron Lizer opened the second night of the Republican National Convention and said that President Trump has repaired the relationship between the Navajo people and the federal government. pic.twitter.com/2dNJpvrEpK
— DENNIS ONKEN (@dennis_onken) August 26, 2020
Posted by Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez and Vice President Myron Lizer on Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Note: This story originally appeared on Cronkite News. It is published via a Creative Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
Join the Conversation