On Wednesday, the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs conducted an oversight hearing to review the priorities of Native ...
Minnesota Lieutenant Governor Peggy Flanagan, the highest-ranking Native American woman in state government and a citizen of ...
Overall, 139 of today’s senators and representatives identify as Black, Hispanic, Asian American or Native American.
Native organizational leaders told the Senate Indian Affairs Committee to ensure Congress continues to fund federal programs ...
The nation’s oldest and largest tribal advocacy group is shaping its strategy for carrying a unified voice to a fractured ...
February Issue Davids joins New Mexico’s Deb Haaland, of Laguna Pueblo, to become the first Native American women to serve in Congress in its 230-year history. Former Vice President Joe Biden ...
A U.S. veteran and Navajo residents have been asked for identification. Critics are complaining of racial profiling as raids ...
As President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship faces multiple legal challenges, some tribal members are ...
Native women tribal leaders share their priorities as the National Congress of American Indians meets in Washington, D.C.
"Stopping people because of what they look like — with dark skin, Asian, Latino or Native American characteristics is never acceptable," the group says in a letter.
About 75,000 U.S. federal workers accepted the deferred buyout program of President Donald Trump's administration, a spokesperson for the U.S. Office of Personnel Management said late on Wednesday.
A Native American tribe in South Dakota that previously banished ... Ms. Noem, while complaining about an “invasion” of illegal migrants at the southern border before Congress, suggested that the ...