Daschle Beware: Democrat 'Communism' Converts Indian Activists to GOP
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, April 6, 2004
More: See Dead Indians 'Vote' for Democrats,
Election Fraud in South Dakota
and Democrats Buy Indians' Votes for $10
PINE RIDGE, S.D. – Bruce Whalen is trying to persuade
people around the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to do something
they just don't do: vote Republican.
The task may seem daunting if not impossible in a county
where Democrats outnumber Republicans nearly 11-to-1. But
Republicans believe the Indian vote could play a decisive role in
this year's closely watched Senate race between Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle and former GOP Rep. John Thune.
They say Daschle has failed to use his clout in Washington to
solve rampant problems on the reservation, where people live in
almost Third World conditions. Unemployment is more than 70 percent
and average annual income is around $3,500 in Shannon County, which
makes up much of the reservation.
Dangerous Dole
Whalen, the Shannon County GOP chairman, believes that
Democrat-backed government programs that dole out entitlements to
Indians are the root of the problem.
"I see how the social programs are devastating the people
around here," Whalen, a 41-year-old college student and Lakota
Sioux Indian, said during a recent break from classes at Pine Ridge
Oglala Lakota College. "The Democrats are hurting us."
Shannon County, with a population of about 12,000, has only 476
registered Republicans to 5,171 Democrats.
Republicans have painful memories of a Senate race two years ago
in which Democrat Sen. Tim Johnson defeated Thune by 524 votes
statewide. In Shannon County, Johnson trounced Thune, 2,856 to 248.
The county's votes did not come in until about 12 hours after
the polls closed, and they tipped the balance to Johnson, leading
to suspicions of vote-tampering on the reservation.
It is too early to know if the Daschle-Thune contest will be as
close, but the Republicans do not want to miss any opportunity in
one of the year's most intriguing races.
Daschle is by far South Dakota's most powerful politician, with
three terms in the Senate and more than eight years as the Senate
Democrat leader. His leadership position has brought immense
clout to this rural state of about 750,000.
Thune is a former three-term congressman who party leaders
believe has the name recognition and charisma to knock off Daschle.
He has the backing of the White House and other big-name
Republicans who would love to unseat one of President Bush's most
persisent critics.
Daschle agreed Indians will play a big role in this year's
Senate race. But he said a Democrat is better suited to represent
them in the long run and help with issues such as health care, law
enforcement, and housing.
South Dakota's nine Indian reservations could play a role in
another closely watched campaign this year: a special election in
June to fill the congressional seat that Rep. Bill Janklow gave up
after being convicted of manslaughter in a traffic accident.
In 2002, Thune was hurt by an intense get-out-the-vote effort by
Democrats that helped boost Indian voter turnout by 20 percent. He
said that this year would be different and that Daschle was
vulnerable.
"The argument I make to [Indians] is, you've had 26 years of
Tom Daschle, and what has improved? Are your lives really any
better? You still have high unemployment, high poverty, addiction
and mortality rates that exceed national levels," Thune said.
Joe American Horse of Pine Ridge has not been swayed by either
campaign. American Horse, a Republican who plans to vote
independent, said he had not heard much from the Republicans.
"I saw a lot of campaign advertising on Sen. Daschle, but I
haven't seen anything on the other party, I think his name is
Thune. There's very little. Maybe they're going to do a sneak
attack," said American Horse, 67.
Russell Means Sees the Light
Thune has picked up key support from Indian
activist-turned-politician Russell Means, who is campaigning for
Thune. The Democratic Party helped establish a system that makes
Indians beholden to the federal government, and Daschle helped
create such an environment, Means said.
"I mean it's pure communism, and it's an abject failure. Just
like it was in the Soviet Union. It's failure. You've created a
dictatorship by the Bureau of Indian Affairs," Means said.
Daschle said that people on reservations would like to be on
their own but that that was not possible without help. Treaty
obligations require the government to provide health care,
education and housing, he said.
"We have Third World conditions," Daschle said. "Those treaty
obligations ought to be respected and fulfilled."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
Live Free or Die – get the T-shirt – click here now!
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
2004 Elections
DNC
RNC