FROM THE ARCHIVE
Ariz. congressman makes tribe a priority
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2003 Freshman Congressman Raúl M. Grijalva made his first bill in Congress one that he pursued as a local official in Arizona: making the members of the Tohono O'odham Nation citizens of the United States. Grijalva is a Democrat whose district includes the sprawling reservation, the size of Connecticut. The citizenship bill has the backing of 53 House members. "We're correcting an injustice," he tells The New York Times, which is following him around during his freshman year. Get the Story:
2 Introduce Legislation That Is Close to Homes (The New York Times 2/20)
Username: indianzcom, Password: indianzcom Get the Bill:
The Tohono O'odham Citizenship Act of 2003 (H.R.731) Related Stories:
O'odham citizenship bill reintroduced (02/13)
Aid to border crossers criticized (09/26)
Tribe seizes 300 pounds of drugs daily (9/25)
Mexican migrants stress tribal hospitals (9/24)
Four bodies recovered on Ariz. reservation (8/30)
Tribe sees double standard on border (8/12)
Mexico's President invites tribal leaders (8/05)
Changes sought in U.S. border policy (6/18)
Ariz. tribe wrests with border issue (6/13)
Ariz. tribal pastor claims intimidation (6/11)
Border arrests increase on reservation (6/7)
Ariz. tribe pushes citizenship bill (6/4)
Bush announces Mexican border plan (3/22)
Tribal members fear border harassment (11/26)
Tough border policy rejects Mexicans (10/2)
Machines not ready for tough border policy (10/1)
Border policy could affect Tohono O'odham (9/27)
Tohono O'odham elder dies (8/29)
O'odham citizenship bill pushed (6/29)
O'odham delegation on way to D.C. (5/31)
Tribe protests border policies (5/29)
Citizenship for Mexican O'odham sought (1/12)
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