| |
Category: 17.8. Tribal government
WITT013. Witten, Scott. Lumbees
approve constitution. Robesonian 11 November 2001.
Publication type: Newspaper article
Unofficial results of the November 7 vote on
the tribal constitution were: 2,237 votes in favor, 412 votes against.
The constitution provides for:
-a three-branch government with
a chairperson, tribal council, and
Supreme Court
Districts for electing the 21-member council;
-an elections board to carry
out the election of the first tribal council in
November, 2003;
-five Supreme Court justices
(two lawyers and three community members)
serving single five-year
terms.
Turnout for the election was not large, considering that
there are 55,229 enrolled tribal members (over 40,000 of them in Robeson
County). The tribal rolls now include deceased members and members under
18--thus ineligible to vote. Janice Locklear, tribal enrollment genealogist,
estimates that there are about 25,000 eligible voters.
The election failed in Raleigh, Baltimore, and the Robeson
County Community of Rennert. Some reasons for opposition to the tribal
constitution include: its failure to include representatives from communities
outside North Carolina (the constitution establishes the state of North
Carolina as the tribal territory); the fact that tribal representatives
can hold more than one office; and the fact that convicted felons will
be eligible for tribal offices.
Additional Subjects: Tribal Constitution
This annotation was written on: December 3, 2001; last
edited on June 18, 2002.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net |
|