Legal and Procedural Matters Related to
January 19, 2023
Seating a Cherokee Nation Delegate in the
Mainon A. Schwartz,
House of Representatives
Coordinator
Legislative Attorney
On August 22, 2019, Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. announced his tribe’s

intention to nominate a delegate to a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives to represent the
Whitney K. Novak
Cherokee Nation for the first time. This announcement invoked a provision of the 1835 New
Legislative Attorney
Echota Treaty, a pact between the Eastern Cherokee Tribe of Georgia and the U.S. government.

On August 29, 2019, the Council of the Cherokee Nation approved Chief Hoskin’s nomination of
Kimberly Teehee to serve as the Cherokee Delegate. The COVID-19 pandemic reportedly
Mark J. Oleszek
delayed congressional considerations for seating Ms. Teehee, and as of January 2023, no action
Analyst on Congress and
the Legislative Process
had been taken to seat her, though the House Committee on Rules held a November 18, 2022,

hearing to discuss the matter.

This report identifies and analyzes issues Congress may consider when evaluating the Cherokee
Nation’s nomination of a delegate to the House of Representatives. The relevant treaty language is subject to different
interpretive principles, including the so-called Indian canons of construction. Use of similar language in other
contemporaneous documents and available historical context may also aid in interpretation. In the event Congress chooses to
take action to execute the delegate language in the Treaty, Congress may consider a few procedural options as well as
potential objections to those actions. Congress may also wish to consider potential legal challenges that could arise if it were
to seat a Cherokee Delegate, including whether such challenges would be justiciable in court.


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Contents
Principles for Interpreting Treaties with Indian Tribes ............................................................. 2
Historical Provisions Mentioning a Legislative Deputy or Delegate ........................................ 2

Agreements Between the United States and Tribes Other Than the Cherokee ................... 3
Treaty Between the Cherokee and the Confederacy ........................................................... 4
Treaties Between the Cherokee and the United States ........................................................ 4

Current Status of the Delegate Provision .................................................................................. 9
The Possibility of Ineffectiveness or Abrogation ............................................................... 11
Procedural Options to Seat a Cherokee Delegate .................................................................... 15
1. Enactment of Legislation .............................................................................................. 15
2. Incorporation of Position into the Standing Rules ........................................................ 16
3. Question of the Privileges of the House........................................................................ 18
Potential Legal Challenges to Seating a Cherokee Delegate .................................................. 19
Equal Protection Considerations ....................................................................................... 19
Justiciability ...................................................................................................................... 22
Conclusion .............................................................................................................................. 24

Tables
Table 1. Statutes Providing for Territorial Representation in Congress ........................................ 15

Contacts
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 25

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he issue of seating a Cherokee Delegate in the House rose to prominence on August 22,
2019, when Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. announced his tribe’s
T intention to nominate a delegate to represent the Cherokee Nation. This announcement
invoked a provision of the 1835 treaty between the Eastern Cherokee Tribe of Georgia
(“Cherokee Tribe” or “Cherokee”1) and the U.S. government (New Echota Treaty).2 On August
29, 2019, the Council of the Cherokee Nation unanimously approved Chief Hoskin’s nomination
of Kimberly Teehee to serve as the Cherokee Delegate.3 Efforts to seat her were reportedly
delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.4 On November 18, 2022, the House Committee on
Rules held a hearing to discuss legal and procedural matters related to Ms. Teehee’s nomination.5
If seated, the Cherokee Delegate could not be a full voting participant in the House under Article
I, Section 2 of the Constitution, which sets forth requirements for the composition of the House
and qualifications of its Members. Among these is the requirement that “Members [be] chosen
every second Year by the People of the several States,”6 a requirement that a Cherokee Delegate
would not meet. Accordingly, the Cherokee Delegate could not vote on the House floor to pass
legislation. However, the chamber could authorize a Cherokee Delegate to vote in committee and
to address Members from the floor. This is similar to the current role of delegates for the U.S.
territories and the District of Columbia,7 which changes in its particulars (such as voting in the
Committee of the Whole) from time to time. In the 118th Congress—and previously in the 103rd,
110th, 111th, 116th, and 117th Congresses—delegates are permitted to vote in and preside over
the Committee of the Whole, although their votes are not permitted to be decisive.8
This report identifies and analyzes an array of legal and procedural factors Congress may
consider when evaluating possible congressional action in response to the Cherokee Nation’s
nomination of a delegate to the House. These include certain principles of treaty interpretation;

1 For purposes of this report, when discussing historical documents and agreements, “Cherokee Tribe” or “Cherokee” is
used to distinguish the tribe that was a signatory to the New Echota Treaty and other historical agreements from any
modern-day descendant groups recognized by the federal government, including the Cherokee Nation. CRS does not
determine the successors in interest to any treaty.
2 Treaty with the Cherokees, Cherokee-U.S., Dec. 29, 1835, 7 Stat. 478 [hereinafter New Echota Treaty].
3 For additional background on Ms. Teehee’s nomination, see Stephanie Akin, Delegate-in-Waiting (for 184 Years),
CQ WEEKLY 27–29 (Oct. 15, 2019). While congressional interest over the delegate provision of the New Echota Treaty
has focused mainly upon its invocation by the Cherokee Nation, the treaty has also been cited in other claims brought
by descendants of the historical Cherokee Tribe that was a signatory to that treaty. See, e.g., Molly Young, A Tribal
Delegate in Congress? Cherokee Campaign Ramps Up under Treaty Promise
, OKLAHOMAN (Sept. 24, 2022),
https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/politics/government/2022/09/24/cherokee-delegate-in-congress-gains-support-
amid-grassroots-campaign/69512293007/ (noting related claim asserted by United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee
Indians). This report does not address the claims that have been or could be brought by different Cherokee tribes, or
whether the New Echota Treaty might permit the seating of multiple delegates from descendants of the historical
Cherokee Tribe). A brief history of the Cherokee Tribe may be found in Cherokee Nation v. Nash, 267 F. Supp. 3d 86,
94 n.11 (D.D.C. 2017).
4 E.g., Chuck Hoskin Jr., Cherokee Nation's Path to Seating Congressional Delegate, HILL (Mar. 4, 2022),
https://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/politics/596946-cherokee-nations-path-to-seating-congressional-delegate.
5 HouseRules, Legal & Procedural Factors Related to Seating a Cherokee Nation Delegate in the U.S. House,
YOUTUBE (Nov. 16, 2022), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ACAlvZpA37A.
6 U.S. CONST. art. 1, § 2. For more legal analysis of this language, see Cong. Rsch. Serv., Voter Qualifications for
House of Representatives Elections
, CONSTITUTION ANNOTATED, https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artI-
S2-C1-2/ALDE_00001032/ (last visited Nov. 4, 2022).
7 See generally 48 U.S.C. ch. 16 (territorial delegates to Congress); District of Columbia Self-Government and
Governmental Reorganization Act (District of Columbia Home Rule Act), Pub. L. No. 93-198, 87 Stat. 774 (1973).
8 See infra note 123 and accompanying text; CRS Report R40555, Delegates to the U.S. Congress: History and Current
Status
, by Jane A. Hudiburg.
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analysis of the relevant treaty provisions and historical context; evaluation of events subsequent
to treaty signing; procedural options for recognizing a Cherokee Delegate; and potential
objections to such actions.
Principles for Interpreting Treaties with Indian Tribes
Treaties with federally recognized tribes9 are sui generis because of tribes’ unique legal status
under the Constitution.10 Early in U.S. history, the U.S. Supreme Court characterized federally
recognized tribes as “domestic dependent nations” with a relationship to the federal government
akin to a ward’s relationship to its guardian.11 As a consequence, the courts have held that a trust
relationship exists between the United States and federally recognized tribes and have developed
three distinct canons of construction for interpreting Indian treaties, known as the Indian
canons
.12 First, treaties with Indian tribes should generally be interpreted in the sense in which the
tribal signers would have understood them.13 Second, ambiguities regarding tribal interests should
be construed to the tribes’ benefit.14 Third, if Congress intends to diminish tribal lands or abrogate
a treaty, it must do so explicitly.15 Notwithstanding this clear-intent requirement, Congress retains
the authority to abrogate an Indian treaty by subsequent legislation.16
Historical Provisions Mentioning a Legislative Deputy or Delegate
Given the canon of construction requiring that the words of a treaty be interpreted as they would
have been understood by the Indian tribe signing it, one source for developing that understanding
may be the use of similar language in other contemporaneous documents, such as other historical
treaties containing delegate provisions.17 Several other treaties from approximately the same time

9 Unless otherwise specified, the terms “Indian” and “tribe” reflect statutory language denoting tribal entities that,
through a process known as federal recognition or federal acknowledgment, have a government-to-government
relationship with the United States and are entitled to certain rights and privileges. See, e.g., 25 U.S.C. § 5131(a)
(directing the Secretary of the Interior to publish annually a list of all Indian tribes recognized as “eligible for the
special programs and services provided by the United States to Indians because of their status as Indians”).
10 U.S. CONST. art. 1, § 8 (Congress shall have the power to “regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the
several States, and with the Indian Tribes.”). For more legal analysis of Congress’s Indian Commerce Clause power,
see Cong. Rsch. Serv., Scope of Commerce Clause Authority and Indian Tribes, CONSTITUTION ANNOTATED,
https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artI-S8-C3-1-3/ALDE_00012976/ (last visited Nov. 4, 2022).
11 Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1, 10, 13 (1831).
12 “[T]he standard principles of statutory construction do not have their usual force in cases involving Indian law.”
Montana v. Blackfeet Tribe of Indians, 471 U.S. 759, 766 (1985). See also Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 515
(1832).
13 Worcester, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) at 546–47, 552–54 (Marshall, C.J.); see also id. at 582 (McLean, J., concurring) (“How
the words of the treaty were understood by [the Indians], rather than their critical meaning, should form the rule of
construction.”); accord Herrera v. Wyoming, 139 S. Ct. 1686, 1699 (2019).
14 Worcester, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) at 582 (McLean, J., concurring) (“The language used in treaties with the Indians should
never be construed to their prejudice.”); accord Herrera, 139 S. Ct. at 1699 (“Indian treaties must be interpreted . . .
with any ambiguities resolved in favor of the Indians.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
15 Worcester, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) at 554 (Marshall, C.J.) (congressional intent to diminish tribal sovereignty must “have
been openly avowed.”); see also Herrera, 139 S. Ct. at 1698 (“If Congress seeks to abrogate treaty rights, ‘it must
clearly express its intent to do so.’ ” (quoting Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 172, 202
(1999))).
16 There must be “clear evidence that Congress actually considered the conflict between its intended action on the one
hand and Indian treaty rights on the other, and chose to resolve that conflict by abrogating the treaty.” Mille Lacs,
526 U.S. at 202–03.
17 Other potential sources, such as those that may have been maintained orally or otherwise by tribal elders or
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period, including one between the Cherokee and the Confederate States of America during the
Civil War, contain references to delegates or other representatives that may shed light on the
contemporaneous understanding of those terms.
Agreements Between the United States and Tribes Other Than the Cherokee
The first treaty with a tribal nation signed by the United States, the Treaty with the Delawares of
September 17, 1778, contained a provision for representation in the Continental Congress at a
future date, subject to certain conditions including congressional approval.18 Thus, the Cherokee
Tribe was not the only tribe with a treaty provision permitting a legislative delegate, though it
does not appear that the U.S. Congress or its predecessor bodies has ever taken action to
effectuate such a provision by seating a tribal delegate from any tribe.19
Contemporaneously with the signing of the New Echota Treaty in 1835, Congress considered
various bills to remove the Indian tribes to the West and to provide for an Indian Territory outside
of any state (thus free of state interference with federal Indian policy).20 The House Committee on
Indian Affairs recommended the creation of an Indian Territory subject to federal law and control
over which the Indian tribes, united in a confederation, would exercise limited self-government.21
The Committee also recommended providing “to the confederation a delegate in Congress, with
the privileges and emoluments of a territorial delegate,” encouraging the hope “of their eventual
admission as a State into the Union.”22
This provision appeared in a bill—favorably reported by the House Committee on Indian
Affairs—to provide for the establishment of a Western Territory and for the security and
protection of the emigrant and other Indian tribes therein. That bill included provisions for a
territorial governor appointed by the President; the organization of a confederation of the tribes
settled in the Territory with power to enact ordinances regarding intertribal affairs that would go
into effect upon the governor’s approval; civil and criminal jurisdiction over the territory and
persons within it; and applicability of the Indian trade and intercourse laws.23 Also included was a
provision allowing “the said confederated tribes to elect, in such manner as the General Council
may prescribe, a Delegate to Congress, who shall have the same powers, privileges, and

historians, are beyond the scope of this report.
18 Article VI of the 1778 Treaty with the Delawares provided, inter alia:
[S]hould it for the future be found conducive for the mutual interest of both parties to invite any other
tribes who have been friends to the interest of the United States, to join the present confederation,
and to form a state whereof the Delaware nation shall be the head, and have a representation in
Congress: Provided, nothing contained in this article to be considered as conclusive until it meets
with the approbation of Congress.
Treaty with the Delawares, Del. Nation-U.S., art. VI, Sept. 17, 1778, 7 Stat. 13 [hereinafter Delawares
Treaty].
19 For a discussion of historical practices involving tribal delegations to Congress, see HERMAN J. VIOLA, DIPLOMATS IN
BUCKSKINS: A HISTORY OF INDIAN DELEGATIONS IN WASHINGTON CITY 25–26 (1995). There were official and unofficial
delegations; some delegations were federally funded, with expenses paid by appropriations, including after the
establishment of the U.S. Congress. See, e.g., Act of June 28, 1834, ch. 15, 4 Stat. 705 (appropriating $5,600 for the
expenses of thirteen Cherokee delegates to the U.S. Congress).
20 See H.R. REP. NO. 23-474, at 18 (1834) (House Committee on Indian Affairs report stating: “Our inability to perform
our treaty guaranties [sic] arose from the conflicts between the rights of the States and of the United States.”).
21 Id.
22 Id. at 21.
23 See generally id.
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compensations as are possessed by the Delegates of the respective Territories.”24 The Committee
approved of this provision, among other reasons, for affording the tribes “convincing proof of the
desire of the United States” to secure for the tribes “all the blessings of free government” and
“full participation” in the privileges of the American people.25
The Committee further expounded its reasons for recommending such a delegate and concluded
that the “right to a delegate in Congress” was “a subject of the deepest solicitude for the Indians,”
and “the strongest assurance” that the United States would fulfill its promises. The Committee
wrote, “it is believed public sentiment will sustain the concession as an act of justice as well as of
sound policy.”26 The committee report also provided a history of other treaties calling for Indian
delegates to Congress.27
Treaty Between the Cherokee and the Confederacy
On October 7, 1865, the Cherokee concluded a treaty with the Confederate States of America,
which included as Article XLIV a detailed entitlement to “a Delegate to the House of
Representatives of the Confederate State [sic] of America . . . [with] the same rights and
privileges as may be enjoyed by Delegates from any Territories of the Confederate States to the
said House of Representatives.”28 This provision was intended “to enable the Cherokee Nation to
claim its rights and secure its interests without the intervention of counsel or agents.”29
Though perhaps of limited usefulness given its status as a non-U.S. treaty, this delegate provision
could shed light on the expectations the Cherokee would have assigned to a promise of a
delegate. The fact that the rights and privileges would have been tied to those of delegates from
other territories of the Confederacy, rather than delegates from the Confederate States, may
indicate an understanding that Cherokee delegates would not be on the same footing as elected
representatives.
Treaties Between the Cherokee and the United States
Prior to the Cherokee’s treaty with the Confederate States of America, two treaties between the
Cherokee Tribe and the United States mentioned a tribal deputy or delegate to the national
legislature. A third treaty reaffirmed the relationship between the Cherokee and the United States
after the Confederacy surrendered, but it does not explicitly mention a delegate.30

24 Id. at 37.
25 Id.
26 Id. at 21.
27 Id. at 21–22. The Committee noted that the 1830 Treaty with the Choctaws indicated the executive branch
negotiators’ doubt in their ability to bind Congress in the matter of an Indian delegate. Article XXII of the 1830 Treaty
with the Choctaw provides: “The Chiefs of the Choctaws . . . have expressed a solicitude that they might have the
privilege of a Delegate on the floor of the House of Representatives extended to them. The Commissioners do not feel
that they can under a treaty stipulation accede to the request, but at their desire, present it in the Treaty, that Congress
may consider of, and decide the application.” Treaty of Perpetual Friendship, Cession, and Limits art. XXII, Choctaw
Nation-U.S., Sept. 27, 1830, 7 Stat. 333, 338 [hereinafter Choctaw Treaty].
28 Treaty of Friendship and Alliance, Cherokee Nation-Confederate States of Am., Oct. 7, 1861, art. XLIV, Official
Records, Series 7, vol. 1, pt. 1, 669, reprinted in STATUTES AT LARGE OF THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE
CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA 394 (James M. Matthews ed., 1864) [hereinafter Treaty With the Confederacy].
29 Id.
30 Treaty with the Cherokee Nation, Cherokee Nation-U.S., July 19, 1866, 14 Stat. 799 [hereinafter 1866 Cherokee
Treaty].
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Treaty of Hopewell (1785)
Article XII of the 1785 Hopewell Treaty with the Cherokee Tribe (Hopewell Treaty)31 provides:
“That the Indians may have full confidence in the justice of the United States, respecting their
interests, they shall have the right to send a deputy of their choice, whenever they think fit, to
Congress.”
The Hopewell Treaty predates the U.S. Constitution.32 At that time, the Confederation
Congress’s33 goals were to make peace with tribes that had sided with the British in the
Revolutionary War; to establish boundaries with Indian nations; and to consolidate power over
Indian affairs in the national government.34 The guarantee of the right to send a deputy to the
Confederation Congress appears in this context. The Hopewell Treaty also provided for
exchanging prisoners of war; acknowledged the Cherokees as under the United States’ protection;
designated boundaries and jurisdiction; established commercial relations; and pledged peace.35
The minutes of the treaty council do not elaborate on the intent behind establishing a right to send
a deputy to the Confederation Congress, nor do they reflect whether its inclusion came at the
request of the Cherokee or at the commissioners’ suggestion.36 According to the minutes, the
commissioners produced a draft treaty, which was read to the Cherokee Tribe and translated, at
which point the Cherokee agreed that they understood and would sign the treaty.37
Nonetheless, because (1) the Cherokee Nation purports to act on the New Echota Treaty, rather
than the Hopewell Treaty, in nominating a delegate; (2) the Confederation Congress is not the
same body as the current U.S. Congress; and (3) the right to a deputy may differ materially from
the right to a delegate, this report does not further analyze the Hopewell Treaty’s deputy
provision.
New Echota Treaty (1835)
Article 7 of the New Echota Treaty between the United States and the Cherokee Tribe provides
that the Cherokee “shall be entitled to a delegate in the House of Representatives of the United

31 Treaty with the Cherokees art. XII, Cherokee Nation-U.S., Nov. 28, 1785, 7 Stat. 18, 20 [hereinafter Hopewell
Treaty].
32 Article VI, Clause 2 of the Constitution recognizes treaties made by the United States prior to adoption of the
Constitution. See Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. 515, 559 (1832).
33 The national legislature that convened in 1781 after the adoption of the Articles of Confederation is known as the
Confederation Congress. For a discussion of the Confederation Congress’s actions and authority, see, e.g., Richard P.
McCormick, Ambiguous Authority: The Ordinances of the Confederation Congress, 1781-1789, 41 AM. J. LEGAL HIST.
411, 411 (1997).
34 See FELIX COHEN, HANDBOOK OF FEDERAL INDIAN LAW 58–62 (1982).
35 Hopewell Treaty, supra note 31, at arts. I–IX.
36 1 AMERICAN STATE PAPERS: INDIAN AFFAIRS 40–43 (William S. Hein & Co. 1988) (1832).
37 Id. One of the Cherokee representatives is quoted as saying:
I am fond to hear the talks of the beloved men of Congress, and of ours. You commissioners
remember the talks, and I shall always endeavor to support the peace and friendship now established.
. . . I now depend on the commissioners. If any thing depends on me to strengthen our friendship, I
will faithfully execute it. You are now our protectors. When I go and tell those of our people who
could not come to hear your talks, what I have seen and heard, they will rejoice. I have heard your
declarations of a desire to do us any service in your power; I believe you, and in confidence shall rest
happy.
Id. at 43. Though minimal, this mention of the Confederation Congress in the context of promises to protect the tribe
may shed some light on how the role of a deputy was viewed at the time the treaty was signed.
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States whenever Congress shall make provision for the same.”38 An examination of the Treaty’s
terms and historical context could provide additional perspective on that provision.
In the New Echota Treaty, the Cherokee signatories agreed to relinquish their eastern lands and
remove their nation to new territory west of the Mississippi River. Ultimately, tens of thousands
of Cherokee members underwent a forced trek westward known as the Trail of Tears.39 The
Treaty signing occurred during an era when one of the federal government’s policy goals was
removal of Indian tribes to unsettled lands in the West, freeing eastern lands for non-Indian
settlers.40 The parties entered into the Treaty41 three years after the Supreme Court, in Worcester v.
Georgia
,42 rejected Georgia’s attempt to exercise authority within Cherokee country.43 Thus, at a
time when the Cherokees were suffering “increasing abuse from white settlers,” the United States
“signed a treaty with the supporters of removal”44 among the Cherokees. However, because the

38 New Echota Treaty, supra note 2, art. 7, 7 Stat. 482. That Article reads:
The Cherokee nation having already made great progress in civilization and deeming it important
that every proper and laudable inducement should be offered to their people to improve their
condition as well as to guard and secure in the most effectual manner the rights guarantied [sic] to
them in this treaty, and with a view to illustrate the liberal and enlarged policy of the Government of
the United States towards the Indians in their removal beyond the territorial limits of the States, it is
stipulated that they shall be entitled to a delegate in the House of Representatives of the United States
whenever Congress shall make provision for the same.
39 According to one scholar: “The ratification of the Treaty of New Echota ‘legalized’ the forced removal of Cherokees
from their Georgia and Tennessee homeland and led directly to the infamous Trail of Tears.” Ezra Rosser, The Nature
of Representation: The Cherokee Right to a Congressional Delegate
, 15 B.U. PUB. INT. L.J. 91, 91–92 (2005). See also
Chadwick Smith & Faye Teague, The Response of the Cherokee Nation to the Cherokee Outlet Centennial
Celebration: A Legal and Historical Analysis
, 29 TULSA L.J. 263, 273 (1993) (“This treaty was the basis for the
infamous Trail of Tears. In Article 1, the Cherokees relinquished to the United States all their lands east of the
Mississippi.”).
40 In 1830, Congress enacted what is known as the Removal Act “[t]o provide for an exchange of lands with the Indians
residing in any of the states or territories, and for their removal west of the river Mississippi.” Act of May 28, 1830, ch.
148, 4 Stat. 411.
41 New Echota Treaty, supra note 2, pmbl., 7 Stat. 478 (“Articles of a treaty, concluded at New Echota in the State of
Georgia on the 29th day Decr. 1835 by General William Carroll and John F. Schermerhorn commissioners on the part
of the United States and the Chiefs Head Men and People of the Cherokee tribe of Indians.”).
42 Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 515, 561 (1832) (Marshall, C.J.) (“The Cherokee nation, then, is a distinct
community, occupying its own territory, with boundaries accurately described, in which the laws of Georgia can have
no force, and which the citizens of Georgia have no right to enter, but with the assent of the Cherokees themselves, or
in conformity with treaties, and with the acts of [C]ongress.”).
43 The dispute over state jurisdiction within the Cherokee reservation has reached the Supreme Court twice. In
Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1 (1831), and Worcester, the Supreme Court essentially upheld the United
States’ authority, ruling that Georgia lacked authority to enforce its laws within the Cherokee territory. For a discussion
of the dispute, see GRANT FOREMAN, INDIAN REMOVAL 229–50 (1932), and FRANCIS PAUL PRUCHA, AMERICAN INDIAN
TREATIES: THE HISTORY OF A POLITICAL ANOMALY 156–82 (1994).
44 Cohen, supra note 34, § 1.03(4)(a).
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signatories did not include Cherokee leaders,45 the New Echota Treaty appears to have lacked the
support of the majority of the Cherokee Tribe.46
Those who signed the New Echota Treaty assented to a Preamble stating that they desired to
move west and establish a permanent homeland for their entire nation.47 Under Article 16 of the
Treaty, the Cherokee Tribe signatories agreed “to remove to their new homes within two years
from the ratification of this treaty.”48 Provisions on claims for former reservations49 and for
accommodating Cherokees who wished to remain50 were eliminated based on President Andrew
Jackson’s “determination . . . that the whole Cherokee people should remove together and
establish themselves in the country provided for them west of the Mississippi.”51
Article 1 of the New Echota Treaty ceded Cherokee lands east of the Mississippi to the United
States in consideration of $5 million.52 Under Article 2, the United States agreed to supplement
western lands already provided for the Cherokees in earlier treaties by selling 800,000 additional
acres to them in fee simple for $500,000.53 Article 5 provided that the ceded lands would not “be

45 Id. § 1.03 n.176 (“When the unauthorized treaty was signed, Principal Chief John Ross was actually in Washington,
D.C. petitioning for relief from abuse and trespass committed by Georgian soldiers and settlers against Cherokees and
their lands.” (citing COLIN G. CALLOWAY, PEN & INK WITCHCRAFT: TREATIES AND TREATY MAKING IN AMERICAN
INDIAN HISTORY 145 (2013))). See also Rosser, supra note 39 at 92 (“An influential minority ultimately rebelled against
Ross’s leadership and signed the Treaty of New Echota on behalf of the Cherokee majority who did not share the
treaty-signers’ perspectives . . . . Presented officially by the administration of President Andrew Jackson as bringing
with them liberal terms for the Cherokees, the U.S. negotiators for the Treaty of New Echota bypassed the elected
Cherokee leadership.”).
46 See H.R. DOC. NO. 25-316, at 1–2, 7 (1838) (“The Cherokee Delegation submitting the memorial and protest of the
Cherokee people to Congress” claimed there were 15,665 signatures protesting that the New Echota Treaty was
concluded by “unauthorized individual Cherokees . . . [and] a violation of the fundamental principles of justice, and an
outrage on the primary rules of national intercourse, as well as of the known laws and usages of the Cherokee nation;
and, therefore, to be destitute of any binding force on us.”). For further historical discussion, including Principal Chief
Ross’s efforts to prevent ratification and a U.S. soldier’s characterization of the treaty as “no treaty at all,” see, e.g.,
Carl J. Vipperman, The Bungled Treaty of New Echota: The Failure of Cherokee Removal, 1836-1838, 73 GA. HIST. Q.
540, 540 (1989), http://www.jstor.org/stable/40582016 (“Even friends of President Andrew Jackson’s administration
condemned the treaty as a fraud on the Cherokee people . . . .”).
47 New Echota Treaty, supra note 2, pmbl., 7 Stat. 478, 478 (“[T]he Cherokees are anxious to make some arrangements
with the Government of the United States whereby the difficulties they have experienced by a residence within the
settled parts of the United States under the jurisdiction and laws of the State Governments may be terminated and
adjusted; and with a view to reuniting their people in one body and securing a permanent home for themselves and their
posterity . . .”).
48 Id. art.16, 7 Stat. 485.
49 Id. art. 13, 7 Stat. 484–85 (“[T]o make a final settlement of all the claims of the Cherokees for reservations granted
under former treaties to any individuals belonging to the nation . . . it is . . . expressly understood by the parties . . . that
all the Cherokees and their heirs and descendants to whom any reservations have been made under any former treaties
with the United States, and who have not sold or conveyed the same by deed or otherwise and who in the opinion of the
commissioners have complied with the terms on which the reservations . . . and which reservations have since been
sold by the United States shall constitute a just claim against the United States and the original reservee or their heirs or
descendants shall be entitled to receive the present value thereof from the United States . . .”).
50 Id. art. 12, 7 Stat. 483 (“Such heads of Cherokee families as are desirous to reside within the States of No. Carolina
Tennessee and Alabama subject to the laws of the same; and who are qualified or calculated to become useful citizens
shall be entitled, on the certificate of the commissioners to a preemption right to one hundred and sixty acres of land or
one quarter section . . .”).
51 Id. supp. arts. pmbl., supp. art. I, 7 Stat. 488.
52 Id. art. 1, 7 Stat. 479.
53 Id. art. 2, 7 Stat. 480 (“[W]hereas it is apprehended by the Cherokees that . . . there is not contained a sufficient
quantity of land for the accommodation of the whole nation on their removal west of the Mississippi the United States
in consideration of the sum of five hundred thousand therefore hereby covenant and agree to convey to the said Indians,
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included within the territorial limits or jurisdiction of any State or Territory” without the
Cherokee Tribe’s consent.54 Other provisions of the Treaty addressed establishing forts;55
guaranteeing peace;56 extinguishing Osage title to lands within the area guaranteed to the
Cherokees;57 covering expenses for Cherokee removal;58 appointing agents to value
improvements on ceded land;59 investing Cherokee funds;60 transferring the Cherokee school
fund;61 granting pensions to Cherokee warriors for aid in the War of 1812;62 and dividing funds
among the various Cherokee groups.63 Finally, the Treaty included provisions authorizing the
commissioners to settle the claims specified in the Treaty64 and providing for advances of
annuities to meet pre-removal conditions.65
In terms of shedding light on the likely meaning of the delegate provision, the larger context of
the New Echota Treaty’s other provisions is not likely to be conclusive. One could argue that the
concessions made by the Cherokee signatories were so broad that the concessions made by the
United States would also have been interpreted expansively. One could argue conversely that the
delegate provision was one small part of a wide-ranging treaty, so that no inferences should be
drawn from the broader negotiations. Because no court has construed the New Echota Treaty’s
delegate provision, it is difficult to predict which interpretive arguments would be most
persuasive.

and their descendants by patent, in fee simple the following additional tract of land situated between the west line of the
State of Missouri and the Osage reservation.”).
54 Id. art. 5, 7 Stat. 481.
55 Id. art. 3, 7 Stat. 480–81.
56 Id. art. 6, 7 Stat. 481 (“The United States agree to protect the Cherokee nation from domestic strife and foreign
enemies and against intestine [sic.] wars between the several tribes.”).
57 Id. art. 4, 7 Stat. 481.
58 Id. art. 8, 7 Stat. 482 (“The United States also agree and stipulate to remove the Cherokees to their new homes and to
subsist them one year after their arrival there and that a sufficient number of steamboats and baggage wagons shall be
furnished to remove them comfortably, and so as not to endanger their health, and that a physician well supplied with
medicines shall accompany each detachment of emigrants removed by the Government.”).
59 Id. art. 9, 7 Stat. 482 (“The United States agree to appoint suitable agents who shall make a just and fair valuation of
all such improvements now in the possession of the Cherokees as add any value to the lands . . . .”).
60 Id. art. 10, 7 Stat. 482 (“The President of the United States shall invest in some safe and most productive public
stocks of the country for the benefit of the whole Cherokee nation who have removed or shall remove to the lands
assigned by this treaty to the Cherokee nation west of the Mississippi the following sums as a permanent fund for the
purposes hereinafter specified and pay over the net income of the same annually . . . .”).
61 Id. art. 11, 7 Stat. 483 (“[T]o commute their permanent annuity of ten thousand dollars for the sum of two hundred
and fourteen thousand dollars, the same to be invested by the President of the United States as a part of the general
fund . . . .”).
62 Id. art. 14, 7 Stat. 485 (“[S]uch warriors of the Cherokee nation as were engaged on the side of the United States in
the late war with Great Britain and the southern tribes of Indians, and who were wounded in such service . . . .”).
63 Id. art. 15, 7 Stat. 485 (“[S]hall be equally divided between all the people belonging to the Cherokee nation east
according to the census just completed; and such Cherokees as have removed west since June 1833 . . . .”).
64 Id. art. 17, 7 Stat. 485–86.
65 Id. art. 18, 7 Stat. 486 (“[W]hereas the nation will not, until after their removal be able advantageously to expend the
income of the permanent funds of the nation it is therefore agreed that the annuities of the nation which may accrue
under this treaty for two years, the time fixed for their removal shall be expended in provision and clothing for the
benefit of the poorer class of the nation . . . .”).
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Current Status of the Delegate Provision
Both before and after the Hopewell Treaty, representatives from the Cherokee Tribe were present
in Washington, D.C.66 One historian writes: “During the 1820s and 1830s Cherokee Delegates
were virtual residents of Washington as they monitored and fought legislation designed to evict
them from their ancestral homes.”67 Similarly, following the New Echota Treaty and throughout
the 19th century, Cherokee representatives were present in Washington, D.C. to interact with the
federal government.68
Notwithstanding this historical practice, the delegate provision of the New Echota Treaty, on its
face, appears to contemplate additional congressional action—“whenever Congress shall make
provision”—before a Cherokee Delegate could be seated in the House. Congress has never
affirmatively provided for a Cherokee Delegate in the House pursuant to the Treaty.
Whether a treaty provision carries the force of law depends on the nature of the agreement—
specifically, whether the treaty provisions are self-executing or non-self-executing.69 The Supreme
Court has long recognized a distinction between self-executing treaties, which “automatically
have effect as domestic law,” and non-self-executing treaties, which “do not by themselves
function as binding federal law.”70 A self-executing treaty is “ ‘equivalent to an act of the
legislature’ . . . when it ‘operates of itself without the aid of any legislative provision.’ ”71 A non-
self-executing treaty, however, may be enforced only “pursuant to legislation to carry [it] into
effect.”72 Treaty provisions are deemed non-self-executing if the text manifests intent that the
provision not be enforceable by U.S. courts because the legislature must first “execute the
contract.”73 There is also broad agreement that treaty provisions should be construed as non-self-
executing if they require action that the Constitution assigns exclusively to Congress or one of its
chambers.74

66 A Cherokee representative was present in Philadelphia to sign the treaty between the Cherokee Tribe and the United
States in 1794. Treaty with the Cherokee Indians, Cherokee-U.S., June 26, 1794, 7 Stat. 43.
67 VIOLA, supra note 19, at 79.
68 Id. Cherokee Principal Chief John Ross appears to have been the primary delegate prior to the Civil War, and
William P. Adair was a delegate on twelve occasions before his death in 1889; both men died in Washington, D.C. See
GARY E. MOULTON, JOHN ROSS: CHEROKEE CHIEF (1978).
69 CRS Report RL32528, International Law and Agreements: Their Effect upon U.S. Law, by Stephen P. Mulligan.
70 Medellin v. Texas, 552 U.S. 491, 504–05 (2008).
71 Id. See also Foster v. Neilson, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) 253, 314 (1829), overruled in part by United States v. Percheman,
32 U.S. (7 Pet.) 51 (1833) (noting that under the U.S. Constitution, a treaty is the “law of the land” and should be
regarded by courts as “equivalent to an act of the legislature, whenever it operates of itself without the aid of any
legislative provision”).
72 Medellin, 552 U.S. at 505.
73 Foster, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) at 314; see also Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692, 735 (2004) (noting “the United
States ratified [the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights] on the express understanding that it was not self-executing
and so did not itself create obligations enforceable in the federal courts”).
74 See, e.g., Edwards v. Carter, 580 F.2d 1055, 1058 (D.C. Cir. 1978) (per curiam) (“[E]xpenditure of funds by the
United States cannot be accomplished by self-executing treaty; implementing legislation appropriating such funds is
indispensable. Similarly, the constitutional mandate that ‘all Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of
Representatives,’. . . appears, by reason of the restrictive language used, to prohibit the use of the treaty power to
impose taxes.”), cert. denied, 436 U.S. 907 (1978). See also 5 ANNALS OF CONG. 771 (1796) (House resolution
declaring that “when a Treaty stipulates regulations on any of the subjects submitted by the Constitution to the power
of Congress, it must depend for its execution, as to such stipulations, on a law or laws to be passed by Congress.”).
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At least one court found compelling an argument that “Indian treaties are virtually always self-
executing” and that “no case has ever held an Indian treaty to be non-self-executing.”75 However,
that case did not involve a treaty provision that expressly contemplated congressional action to
execute it. Moreover, that court acknowledged two points of long-standing precedent from an
1894 case: (1) “no distinction is there made between a treaty with a foreign nation and with an
Indian tribe,” and (2) “where such treaty prescribes a rule by which private rights can be
determined, the court will resort to such rule; otherwise the court must look to the legislation of
Congress for the enforcement of its provisions
.”76
In the New Echota Treaty, the phrase “whenever Congress shall make provision for the same”
appears on its face to render the Cherokee delegate provision non-self-executing, requiring
congressional action to enforce it. The United States, at least, seemed to believe that
congressional action would be required to seat a Cherokee delegate.77 Constitutional
considerations may also favor reading the delegation provision as non-self-executing. The House
does not have a direct role in the treaty-making process. It could raise significant constitutional
issues if the President and Senate were able to bind the House to seat a delegate by way of a
treaty commitment without implementing legislation approved by that chamber.78 As a result, it
appears unlikely that a court would find that the New Echota Treaty created an enforceable (self-
executing) right in the absence of further action by Congress.
In addition to the self-execution question, Congress may consider whether the New Echota
Treaty’s delegate provision is precatory in nature—meaning it might reflect the hope that
Congress take steps to allow a delegate without obligating it to do so.79 Congress may be
empowered to apply elements of its views on this and other matters of interpretation because,
although U.S. courts often have final authority to interpret treaties’ meanings and requirements,
Congress plays a unique role in treaty interpretation when it implements treaties through domestic
legislation.80
Ultimately, the likely non-self-executing nature of the Cherokee delegate provision matters only
insofar as it means an affirmative act by Congress is likely required to seat a Cherokee delegate.
If Congress were inclined to consider congressional action in relation to the New Echota Treaty’s
delegate provision, whether that provision is self-executing or not makes no difference.

75 Tsosie v. United States, 11 Cl. Ct. 62, 73 (1986), aff’d and remanded, 825 F.2d 393 (Fed. Cir. 1987).
76 Tsosie, 11 Cl. Ct. at 73 (emphasis added) (quoting Leighton v. United States, 29 Ct. Cl. 288, 307 (1894)).
77 See generally Rosser, supra note 39, at 119–29 (discussing context surrounding the delegate provision in the New
Echota Treaty). For example, the 1834 articles of agreement between U.S. Commissioner John H. Eaton and a
Cherokee delegation, which predate negotiation over the 1835 New Echota Treaty, contemplated the seating of a
Cherokee delegate by way of a statutory enactment, stating that “it is agreed that, as soon as a majority of the Cherokee
people shall reach their western homes, the President will refer their application to the two Houses of Congress for their
consideration and decision.” S. EXEC. DOC. NO. 23-7, at 4.
78 See, e.g., Edwards, 580 F.2d at 1058 (observing the need for legislation to implement treaty obligations that require
authority exclusively vested in the House). See also U.S. CONST. art. I, §§ 1 (vesting legislative power in the House and
Senate), 2 (providing that the House “shall chuse their Speaker and other Officers”), 5 (establishing that each chamber
“may determine the Rules of its Proceedings”).
79 See Precatory, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (defining precatory as “requesting, recommending, or
expressing a desire rather than a command”). Treaties and international agreements sometimes contain precatory or
hortatory provisions that express aspirational or anticipated goals but do not create legal obligations. For background
on non-legal provisions in international agreements, see CRS Report RL32528, supra note 69, at 12–15.
80 See, e.g., Cong. Rsch. Serv., Interpreting Treaties, CONSTITUTION ANNOTATED, https://constitution.congress.gov/
browse/essay/artII-S2-C2-1-6/ALDE_00012957/ (last visited Nov. 10, 2022).
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When deciding whether or not to act, Congress may also consider its views on whether the treaty
and its delegate provision continue in force. The canons of treaty interpretation discussed above,
though generally viewed as guidelines for judicial interpretation and not binding on Congress,
may inform Congress’s interpretation. As discussed below, those interpretive canons may tend to
counsel in favor of finding that the New Echota Treaty generally, and the Cherokee delegate
provision particularly, continue in force.
The Possibility of Ineffectiveness or Abrogation
The New Echota Treaty’s delegate provision, even if not self-executing, remains relevant to the
extent that Congress could still take action to effectuate it. That is, the delegate provision would
generally remain in effect unless it has been abrogated or otherwise rendered invalid or
unenforceable. Several considerations may be relevant to this analysis.81
Effectiveness. Although Congress has never enacted legislation to establish and fund an Office of
the Cherokee Delegate to the House, it also has never explicitly abrogated the New Echota
Treaty’s delegate provision. One could argue that the Cherokee Tribe broke off relations with the
United States when it entered into a subsequent treaty with the Confederacy, thereby violating
and possibly terminating or abrogating the New Echota Treaty.82 However, the President does not
appear to have expressly abrogated the Treaty following that action, and the Treaty of July 19,
1866 (1866 Treaty) subsequently restored relations between the Cherokee and the United States.83
The 1866 Treaty did not explicitly refer to a Cherokee Delegate, but it did explicitly reaffirm
“[a]ll provisions of treaties heretofore ratified and in force, and not inconsistent with the
provisions of this treaty”84—a broad statement that seemingly reaffirmed that the New Echota
Treaty’s delegate provision.
Accordingly, one view of the Treaty’s delegate provision is that it represents an obligation to seat
a delegate nominated by the Cherokee (even if that obligation might require implementing
legislation85), rather than merely a pledge that Congress might consider whether to seat such a
delegate if nominated.86 Another view, finding support in differences between the New Echota
Treaty’s provision and other treaties executed by the Cherokees,87 might suggest that the New

81 Federal courts have continued to reference the New Echota Treaty as a whole, presuming its continued validity. See,
e.g
., E. Band of Cherokee Indians v. Lynch, 632 F.2d 373 (4th Cir. 1980); Choctaw Nation v. Oklahoma, 397 U.S. 620,
624 (1970).
82 Treaty with the Confederacy, supra note 28, Treaty with the Cherokees, Confederate States of Am.–Cherokee Nation
of Indians, Oct. 7, 1861, reprinted in STATUTES AT LARGE OF THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE CONFEDERATE
STATES OF AMERICA 394 (James M. Matthews ed., 1864), https://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/19conf/19conf.html#p394; Act
of July 5, 1862, 12 Stat. 512, 528; 25 U.S.C. § 72 (“Whenever the tribal organization of any Indian tribe is in actual
hostility to the United States, the President is authorized, by proclamation, to declare all treaties with such tribe
abrogated by such tribe if in his opinion the same can be done consistently with good faith and legal and national
obligations.”).
83 1866 Cherokee Treaty, supra note 30.
84 Id. art. 31, 14 Stat. 806.
85 See supra pp. 9–11 (discussing whether the delegate provision may require implementing legislation).
86 See Rosser, supra note 39, at 118 (“The long standing principle of interpreting treaties between the U.S. government
and Indian tribes in the light most favorable to Indians provides the proper framework for judging the delegate right
contained in the New Echota Treaty. . . . [D]espite protests as to its legitimacy, Cherokees were told that the Treaty was
unalterable. The right to a delegate was not a promise included by U.S. agents in the Treaty in an ad hoc manner.”).
87 Treaty with the Confederacy, supra note 28, at 394. The Treaty with the Confederacy contains a preliminary recital
declaring it was “[m]ade and concluded . . . between . . . the Cherokee Nation of Indians, by John Ross, the Principal
Chief, Joseph Verner, Assistant Principal Chief, James Brown, John Drew and William P. Ross, Executive Councillors,
constituting with the Principal and Assistant Principal Chiefs the Executive Council of the Nation, and authorized to
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Echota Treaty was not understood to constitute a pledge to seat a Cherokee Delegate. Under that
view, the Treaty with the Confederacy’s more explicit description of a Cherokee Delegate’s
powers88 suggests that the Cherokee delegation negotiating with the Confederacy recognized and
sought to correct a perceived inadequacy in the New Echota Treaty’s language. From this
perspective, a comparison of the delegate provisions in three Cherokee treaties may be
instructive:
1. The 1785 Hopewell Treaty, the first Cherokee treaty with the United States,
speaks of “the right to send a deputy of their choice, whenever they think fit to
[the Confederated] Congress,” possibly referring to an agent or the equivalent of
a lobbyist, rather than a right of representation in the Articles of Confederation-
era national legislature.89
2. The 1835 New Echota Treaty provides for “a delegate in the House of
Representatives of the United States whenever Congress shall make provision for
the same,”90 arguably incorporating some notion of representation.
3. The 1861 Treaty with the Confederacy specifies a method of electing and
compensating the Cherokee Delegate to the Confederate House of
Representatives while also detailing the included powers: “each Delegate shall be
entitled to a seat in the hall of the House of Representatives, to propose and
introduce measures for the benefit of the said nation, and to be heard in regard
thereto, and on other questions in which the nation is particularly interested.”91
Abrogation. One could argue that the New Echota Treaty’s Cherokee Delegate provision was tied
to the fate of Indian Territory and that Congress abrogated the delegate guarantee either by not
providing for a separate Indian Territory, as envisioned by Congress in the 1830s, or by including

enter into this treaty by a General Convention of the Cherokee People.” Id.
88 The Treaty with the Confederacy’s delegate provision reads:
In order to enable the Cherokee Nation to claim its rights and secure its interest without the
intervention of counsel or agents, it shall be entitled to a Delegate to the House of Representatives of
the Confederate States of America, who shall serve for a term of two years, and be a native-born
citizen of the Cherokee Nation, over twenty-one years of age, and laboring under no legal disability
by the law of the said nation; and each Delegate shall be entitled to a seat in the hall of the House of
Representatives, to propose and introduce measures for the benefit of the said nation, and to be heard
in regard thereto, and on other questions in which the nation is particularly interested, with such other
rights and privileges as may be determined by the House of Representatives.
Treaty with the Confederacy, supra note 28, art. XLIV, at 403–04, 411 (amending original text). The original text
would have provided the delegate authority equal to that of territorial delegates to the Confederate States. Id. at 403–04.
89 Hopewell Treaty, supra note 31, art. XII, 7 Stat. 20 (“That the Indians may have full confidence in the justice of the
United States, respecting their interests, they shall have the right to send a deputy of their choice, whenever they think
fit, to Congress.”). In Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1, 17 (1831), the Supreme Court acknowledged the
existence of the deputy provision but provided no binding interpretation of it. Compare id. at 25 (Johnson, J.) (“It is
true, that the twelfth article gives power to the Indians to send a deputy to congress; but such deputy, though dignified
by the name, was nothing and could be nothing but an agent, such as any other company might be represented by. It
cannot be supposed that he was to be recognized as a minister, or to sit in the congress as a delegate.”), with id. at 39
(Baldwin, J.) (“The meaning of the words ‘deputy to congress’ in the twelfth article may be as a person having a right
to sit in that body, as at that time it was composed of delegates or deputies from the states, not as at present,
representatives of the people of the states; or it may be as an agent or minister.”). For a discussion of the Justices’
various interpretations of the deputy provision in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, see Rosser, supra note 39, at 121–22
nn.156–61 and accompanying text.
90 New Echota Treaty, supra note 2, art. 7, 7 Stat. 482.
91 Treaty with the Confederacy, supra note 28, at 404.
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the Indian Territory in the State of Oklahoma. However, such arguments appear to be hampered
by the lack of specific evidence of a congressional intent to abrogate.92 As noted, Supreme Court
jurisprudence generally93 rejects treaty abrogation by implication and instead seeks legislative
precision and clarity. Nonetheless, that this possible purpose or context for the delegate provision
may no longer be relevant could factor into Congress’s policy considerations today.
Although Congress considered various bills to remove Indian tribes to the West and to create an
Indian Territory separate from any state,94 none was enacted. The House Committee on Indian
Affairs reported favorably a bill that would have created an Indian Territory over which a
confederation of Indian tribes would exercise limited self-government subject to federal law and
control.95 That bill included a delegate provision, but not for a Cherokee Delegate specifically.96
The bill would have provided “to the confederation a delegate in Congress, with the privileges
and emoluments of a territorial delegate” and explicitly encouraged in tribes “a hope . . . of their
eventual admission as a State into the Union.”97 The Committee detailed its reasons for
recommending such a delegate, including a delegate’s ability to communicate the “practical
effect” of legislation as well as suggestions and complaints.98

92 See generally McGirt v. Oklahoma, 140 S. Ct. 2452 (2020) (rejecting the argument that Oklahoma statehood and
assorted statutory actions sufficed to diminish or disestablish a reservation).
93 See supra notes 15–16 and accompanying text; see also, e.g., Washington v. Wash. State Com. Passenger Fishing
Vessel Ass’n, 443 U.S. 658, 690 (1979) (“Absent explicit statutory language, we have been extremely reluctant to find
congressional abrogation of treaty rights . . . .”); United States v. Dion, 476 U.S. 734, 739 (1986) (“Explicit statement
by Congress is preferable for the purpose of ensuring legislative accountability for the abrogation of treaty rights . . . .
We have not rigidly interpreted that preference, however, as a per se rule; where the evidence of congressional intent to
abrogate is sufficiently compelling, ‘the weight of authority indicates that such an intent can also be found by a
reviewing court from clear and reliable evidence in the legislative history of a statute.’ ” (citations omitted)).
94 H.R. REP. NO. 23-474, at 18 (1834) (House Committee on Indian Affairs stating: “Our inability to perform our treaty
guaranties [sic] arose from the conflicts between the rights of the States and of the United States.”).
95 Id. at 34 (“A Bill to provide for the establishment of the Western Territory, and for the security and protection of the
emigrant and other Indian tribes therein.”).
96 Id. at 37, § 11 (“That, in order to encourage the said tribes, and to promote their advancement in the arts of civilized
life, and to afford to them a convincing proof of the desire of the United States that they may eventually be secured in
all the blessings of free government, and admitted to a full participation of the privileges now enjoyed by the American
people, it shall be competent for the said confederated tribes to elect, in such manner as the General Council may
prescribe, a Delegate to Congress, who shall have the same powers, privileges, and compensations as are possessed by
the Delegates of the respective Territories.”).
97 Id. at 21.
98 The Committee explained:
In view of the relations which this bill will establish, there seems to be, not only a propriety, but a
necessity of their having a delegate in Congress. The intercourse laws which, from time to time, shall
be passed, and the acts of the executive officers we may place among them, are intimately connected
with their prosperity. From a delegate we shall be able to learn their practical effect, and to receive
suggestions for their amendment. It may be of still more consequence to them. Through their delegate
we shall hear their complaints. Hitherto our agents have been almost irresponsible; not because our
laws have not made them responsible, but because there was no channel through which their acts of
injustice could reach us. And, on the other hand, the policy and legislation of our Government will
be faithfully represented to them, ensuring mutual respect and confidence.
. . . . The right to a delegate in Congress is a subject of the deepest solicitude to the Indians, and will
be received by them as the strongest assurance for the fulfillment of our guaranties in all future time.
It will probably do more to elevate the Indian character, and to establish and consolidate their
confederacy, than any, or, perhaps, all other causes combined.
Id. The Committee Report also provided a history of other treaties calling for Indian delegates to Congress, noting the
1830 Treaty with the Choctaws revealed that the executive branch negotiators doubted their ability to bind Congress in
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The bill included provisions for a territorial governor, appointed by the President; a confederation
of the Tribes settled in the Territory,99 empowered to enact ordinances over intertribal affairs that
would go into effect upon the governor’s approval; civil and criminal jurisdiction over the
territory and persons within it; and applicability of the Indian trade and intercourse laws.100
Oklahoma Statehood. Another argument may be that the Cherokee Delegate provision did not
survive the Oklahoma Statehood Act of 1906101 because Indian Territory was no longer outside
any state. However, the New Echota Treaty does not include language characterizing the
Cherokee Delegate provision as temporary (i.e., as terminating upon an event such as statehood),
and the Supreme Court has rejected abrogation of Indian treaty rights by implication. In
Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa, for example, the Court declared, in relation to
whether off-reservation treaty hunting and fishing rights survived Minnesota’s statehood, that
“[t]reaty rights are not impliedly terminated upon statehood.”102 Likewise, the Court in 2020
affirmed that Oklahoma statehood did not disestablish a reservation that had been established in
Indian Territory by treaty.103
Additionally, in a 2019 case involving whether the Crow Tribe’s treaty-protected hunting rights
survived Wyoming’s statehood, the Court explained that the crucial questions in determining a
treaty’s status are whether (1) Congress expressly abrogated the treaty or (2) the treaty terminated
under its own provisions.104 If neither of those can be answered affirmatively, the treaty continues
in force. Statehood thus appears to be irrelevant to a treaty termination analysis unless the
legislation permitting statehood demonstrates Congress’s clear intent to abrogate that treaty or
statehood is written as a termination point in the treaty.
None of the chief laws leading to Oklahoma statehood—the Oklahoma Organic Act of 1890,105
the Dawes Commission Act,106 the Curtis Act of 1898,107 and the Five Tribes Act108—includes any
specific mention of a Cherokee Delegate or the relevant New Echota Treaty provision.

the matter of an Indian delegate. Id. at 21–22. Article XXII of the 1830 Choctaw Treaty states: “The Chiefs of the
Choctaws . . . have expressed a solicitude that they might have the privilege of a Delegate on the floor of the House of
Representatives extended to them. The Commissioners do not feel that they can under a treaty stipulation accede to the
request, but at their desire, present it in the Treaty, that Congress may consider of, and decide the application.”
Choctaw Treaty, supra note 27, art. XXII, 7 Stat. 338.
99 H.R. REP. NO. 23-474, at 36.
100 Id. at 34–37.
101 Act of June 16, 1906, 34 Stat. 267. A Presidential Proclamation of Oklahoma Statehood followed. Proclamation No.
60, 35 Stat. 2160 (Nov. 16, 1907).
102 Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 172, 207 (1999).
103 McGirt v. Oklahoma, 140 S. Ct. 2452, 2477 (2020).
104 Herrera v. Wyoming, 139 S. Ct. 1686, 1696 (2019).
105 Act of May 2, 1890, ch. 182, 26 Stat. 81. Section 16 of this legislation provided for an Oklahoma Territorial
Delegate to the House of Representatives: “a Delegate to the House of Representatives of the United States, to serve
during each Congress of the United States, may be elected by the voters qualified to elect members of the legislative
assembly, who shall be entitled to the same rights and privileges as are exercised and enjoyed by the Delegates from
the several other Territories of the United States in the said House of Representatives.” Id. at 89.
106 Act of Mar. 3, 1893, ch. 209, § 16, 27 Stat. 612, 645–46.
107 Act of June 28, 1898, ch. 504, 30 Stat. 495.
108 Act of Apr. 26 1906, ch. 1875, 34 Stat. 137.
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In light of the above, Congress could reasonably conclude that it had not acted to abrogate the
Cherokee Delegate provision. As such, it would appear that Congress could still take action to
effectuate the provision and seat a nonvoting Cherokee Delegate in the House.
Procedural Options to Seat a Cherokee Delegate
Congress could continue to take no action on the Cherokee Nation’s nomination of a delegate.
However, if Congress were to consider seating a Cherokee Delegate in the House, it could
evaluate the following procedural options. Of these options, a legislative enactment has
historically been the exclusive method to seat delegates, albeit in territorial rather than tribal
contexts, and therefore may be the option least likely to raise constitutional concerns.
1. Enactment of Legislation
Historically, Congress has used legislation to add new delegates. No such position in Congress
has been established except by law. To seat a Cherokee Delegate using this approach would
require House and Senate agreement and presidential approval (or a veto override) of a bill
(H.R./S.) or joint resolution (H.J.Res./S.J.Res.) that establishes a seat in Congress for the new
delegate.109
Two territories acquired by the United States from Spain—Puerto Rico and the Philippines—were
statutorily afforded representation by way of a “resident commissioner” rather than a “delegate.”
Initially, the resident commissioners from Puerto Rico and the Philippines did not enjoy the same
privileges as prior delegates (for instance, they were not allowed on the House floor). The
Philippines are no longer a territory of the United States, and the representative from Puerto Rico
is now known as the Resident Commissioner, a position functionally equivalent to “delegate,”
except that the Resident Commissioner serves a four-year instead of two-year term.110
Reproduced below is Table 1 of CRS Report R40555, Delegates to the U.S. Congress: History
and Current Status
, which identifies legislative enactments since the First Congress (1789 to
1790) providing for territorial representation in the House. Most of the territories listed in Table 1
were later incorporated into the Union as states.
Table 1. Statutes Providing for Territorial Representation in Congress
Territory
Statute
Year
Northwest of the River Ohio
1 Stat. 50
1789a
South of the River Ohio
1 Stat. 123
1790
Mississippi
1 Stat. 549
1798
Indiana
2 Stat. 58
1800
Orleans
2 Stat. 322
1805
Michigan
2 Stat. 309
1805
Il inois
2 Stat. 514
1809
Missouri
2 Stat. 743
1812
Alabama
3 Stat. 371
1817
Arkansas
3 Stat. 493
1819


110 48 U.S.C. § 891.
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Territory
Statute
Year
Florida
3 Stat. 354
1822
Wisconsin
5 Stat. 10
1838
Iowa
5 Stat. 10
1838
Oregon
9 Stat. 323
1848
Minnesota
9 Stat. 403
1849
New Mexico
9 Stat. 446
1850
Utah
9 Stat. 453
1850
Washington
10 Stat. 172
1853
Nebraska
10 Stat. 277
1854
Kansas
10 Stat. 283
1854
Colorado
12 Stat. 172
1861
Nevada
12 Stat. 209
1861
Dakota
12 Stat. 239
1861
Arizona
12 Stat. 664
1863
Idaho
12 Stat. 808
1863
Montana
13 Stat. 853
1864
Wyoming
15 Stat. 178
1868
District of Columbia
16 Stat. 426
1871
Oklahoma
29 Stat. 81
1890
Puerto Rico
31 Stat. 86
1900
Hawaii
31 Stat. 141
1900
Philippine Islands
32 Stat. 694
1902
Alaska
34 Stat. 169
1906
District of Columbia
84 Stat. 848
1970
Virgin Islands
86 Stat. 118
1972
Guam
86 Stat. 118
1972
American Samoa
92 Stat. 2078
1978
Commonwealth of the Northern
122 Stat. 868
2008
Mariana Islands
Source: 124 CONG. REC. 33287 (October 3, 1978); Consolidated Natural Resources Act of 2008, Pub. L. No.
110-229, 122 Stat. 754.
a. This measure from the First Congress reenacted the provisions of the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, with
the changes made necessary by ratification of the Constitution. The original Northwest Ordinance was
enacted under the Articles of Confederation. For information on the history and evolution of delegate
representation in Congress, see CRS Report R40555, Delegates to the U.S. Congress: History and Current
Status
, by Jane A. Hudiburg.
2. Incorporation of Position into the Standing Rules
Although untested, the U.S. House of Representatives could potentially choose to seat a new
delegate by adjusting its standing rules to accommodate a Cherokee Delegate, either at the outset
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of a new Congress or at some point thereafter. A simple House resolution (H.Res.), which does
not require bicameralism and presentment and therefore would not constitute binding law, may be
appropriate for this purpose. Provisions to seat a new delegate could be presented to the House as
part of the standing rules package traditionally agreed to on the opening day of a new Congress or
as a separate resolution proposing changes to the standing rules that would allow the delegate to
be seated.
Measures to change the House’s standing rules fall within the jurisdiction of the House
Committee on Rules. If called up on the House floor, a resolution to seat the new delegate could
be considered “in the House” under the one-hour rule, under suspension of the rules (clause 1 of
Rule XV), or through terms set forth in a special rule reported by the Rules Committee and
agreed to by the House.
Compared to the enactment of bills or joint resolutions, a change to the standing rules could be
accomplished with support from a simple majority of Members (a quorum being present), or with
two-thirds support via suspension procedure. The Senate does not have a role in making changes
to House rules. However, the House’s standing rules expire at the end of each Congress. For a
position established in this way to endure, it would need to be incorporated into the standing rules
of each subsequent Congress.
The legality of seating a delegate through a House rule, rather than by legislation passed by both
chambers and enacted into law, is untested. The Constitution does not reference delegates. While
the Constitution vests each chamber of Congress with the power to “determine the Rules of its
Proceedings,”111 this authority focuses on the internal procedures of each body, rather than who
may be seated.112 The power to determine rules is also bounded by the Constitution. As the
Supreme Court has stated, “the Constitution empowers each house to determine its rules of
proceedings. It may not by its rules ignore constitutional restraints or violate fundamental
rights.”113
There may be reasons to believe that seating a delegate requires exercise of legislative authority
allotted by the Constitution. At least one federal court determined that Congress’s constitutional
authority to establish seats legislatively for nonvoting territorial delegates derives from the
Constitution’s Territories Clause and District Clause.114 That court characterized these clauses as
conferring “Congress with plenary power to regulate and manage the political representation” of
the U.S. territories and the District through the enactment of legislation. The House has
historically seemed to take the view “that the office of a delegate representing a territory (or the
District of Columbia) could not be created other than through legislation.”115
Assuming, based on prior practice relating to the seating of territorial and District delegates, that
a constitutional source of authority besides the Rules Clause would be necessary to seat a
Cherokee Delegate, that authority could theoretically come from the President’s power to “make

111 U.S. CONST. art. I, § 5, cl. 2.
112 See, e.g., Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.S. 486, 550 (1969) (holding that the House was without power to exclude a
duly elected Member from being seated); Michel v. Anderson, 817 F. Supp. 126, 134 (D.D.C. 1993) (citing the
Territories Clause and the District Clause as the source of authority for the House to seat delegates, rather than its
authority to determine the rules of its proceedings), aff’d, 14 F.3d 623 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
113 United States v. Ballin, 144 U.S. 1, 5 (1892).
114 Michel, 817 F. Supp. at 134.
115 See Michel, 14 F.3d at 628 (noting all parties agreed that statute was needed to seat delegates in litigation brought by
then-House Minority Leader Bob Michel and other Members against the House Clerk challenging a 1993 House rule
change allowing delegates to vote in the Committee of the Whole).
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treaties”116 and Congress’s authority to “make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for
carrying into Execution . . . Powers vested by [the] Constitution in the Government of the United
States.”117 The House’s ability to seat the Cherokee Delegate, in other words, would derive from
the terms of the New Echota Treaty. The terms of that treaty, in turn, could be read to require an
act of Congress—that is, a statutory enactment—to authorize the delegation to be seated.118 An
alternative reading, though, could interpret the President’s ratification of the Treaty with the
advice and consent of the Senate as requiring only House action to fulfill the treaty’s terms.
Because no court has ruled on what is required to implement the Cherokee Delegate provision,
Congress’s interpretation on this matter would be binding absent a legal challenge to the validity
of that interpretation.
3. Question of the Privileges of the House
In rare cases, questions surrounding the representation of delegates in the House have given rise
to a question of the privileges of the House,119 but in no case has such a proceeding been used to
establish a delegate position in the first instance. These kinds of questions, which are put to the
House in the form of a simple House resolution, are “those affecting the rights of the House
collectively, its safety, dignity, and the integrity of its proceedings.”120
Questions involving the organization of the House and the rights of Members (or delegates) to
their seats have, in previous Congresses, given rise to valid questions of the privileges of the
House. For instance, in 1857, a question of the privileges of the House arose in connection with
the seating of a delegate from the territory of Utah at a time when the territory appeared to be in a
state of rebellion against the United States. A resolution set forth this question of the privileges of
the House.121 Similarly, a question involving the seating of Ohio Delegate James White in 1794
was raised as a question of the privileges of the House.122 Notably, in both cases, the delegate’s
position within the House had already been established through legislation prior to the question of
the privileges of the House being put to the House (see Table 1).

116 U.S. CONST. art. II, § 2, cl. 2 (“He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make
Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur . . . .”).
117 Id. art. I, § 8, cl. 18.
118 The Cherokee Nation “shall be entitled to a delegate in the House of Representatives of the United States whenever
Congress shall make provision for the same.” New Echota Treaty, supra note 2, art. 7, 7 Stat. 482.
119 CRS Report R44005, Questions of the Privileges of the House: An Analysis, by Megan S. Lynch.
120 Rule IX: Questions of Privilege, RULES OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, 117th Cong. (2021),
https://rules.house.gov/sites/democrats.rules.house.gov/files/117-House-Rules-Clerk.pdf#page=10.
121 The resolution read:
Whereas it appears from the proclamation of Brigham Young, late governor of the Territory of Utah,
from the President’s message, and from later developments, that the said Territory is now in open
rebellion against the Government of the United States: Therefore, Be it resolved, That the Committee
on Territories be instructed to report the facts and to inquire into the expediency of the immediate
exclusion from this floor of the Delegate from said Territory.
CONG. GLOBE, 35th Cong., 1st Sess. 165 (1857); see also ASHER C. HINDS, 3 HINDS’ PRECEDENTS OF THE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES § 2594 (1907).
122 ASHER C. HINDS, 3 HINDS’ PRECEDENTS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES § 400 (1907)
(“In 1794 the House admitted a Delegate on the theory that it might admit to the floor for debate merely anybody
whom it might choose.”).
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Potential Legal Challenges to Seating a Cherokee Delegate
Should the House act to seat a Cherokee Delegate in the future, opponents to that action may
consider challenging it in federal court. Such potential challenges could include issues related to
constitutional guarantees of equal protection under the law, as well as other issues such as those
related to justiciability. The discussion below presumes that, if seated, the Cherokee Delegate
would not have full voting privileges but might exercise many of the same privileges as territorial
delegates.123
Equal Protection Considerations
Legal challenges to seating a Cherokee Delegate could arise under the Constitution’s Equal
Protection Clause. Equal protection challenges in the federal Indian law context are particularly
complex because of the interaction of multiple constitutional and statutory provisions. As
discussed above, Congress could attempt to seat a Cherokee Delegate through congressional
action such as enacting a statute. Such a statute could prompt claims that Congress created a
classification-based law or rule affecting voting rights.124
“[M]ost legislation classifies for one purpose or another, with resulting disadvantage to various
groups or persons,”125 so the existence of a classification is not necessarily an equal-protection
violation. To establish an equal-protection claim, an aggrieved party must show it was “(1) treated
differently from other, similarly situated persons and (2) ‘that this selective treatment was based
on an unjustifiable standard, such as race, or religion, or some other arbitrary factor or to prevent
the exercise of a fundamental right.’ ”126 If a law does not target a suspect class or burden a

123 As previously noted, conferring full voting privileges on the Cherokee Delegate would likely raise serious
constitutional concerns. In 1993, some Members of the House brought suit challenging a change to House rules
enabling the U.S. territories’ and District of Columbia’s delegates to cast votes in the Committee of the Whole. See
Michel v. Anderson, 817 F. Supp. 126, 134 (D.D.C. 1993), aff’d, 14 F.3d 623 (D.C. Cir. 1994). The rule included a
“savings clause” providing that when a vote in the Committee was decided by a margin within which the delegates’
votes were decisive, the issue was automatically referred to the full House for a vote in which the territorial delegates
could not participate. Id. at 142. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia stated that although it would have
been “plainly unconstitutional” for delegates to cast decisive votes in the Committee, the savings clause meant that,
based on the record before it, those votes ultimately “had no effect on legislative power, and . . . did not violate Article
I or any other provision of the Constitution.” Id. at 147–48. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit affirmed the
lower court’s judgment but identified the constitutional question as whether the House rule improperly bestowed “the
characteristics of membership on someone other than those ‘chosen every second Year by the People of the several
States’ ” in violation of Article I, Section 2 of the Constitution. Michel, 14 F.3d at 630. While the court suggested it
would be “blatantly unconstitutional” to confer full voting privileges to the delegates, id. at 627, the delegates’ voting
authority was “largely symbolic” given the rule’s savings clause, and delegate participation in the Committee was akin
to the House’s long-standing practice of allowing delegates to serving on standing committees. Id. at 632.
124 The Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause prohibits state government actors from denying “any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. CONST. amend. XIV. While the Fourteenth Amendment
applies only to state governments, the Court has analyzed federal equal protection claims under the Fifth Amendment
“precisely the same” as those brought under the Fourteenth Amendment. Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld, 420 U.S. 636, 638
n.2 (1975). These equal protection provisions, according to the Supreme Court, require that “all persons similarly
situated should be treated alike.” City of Cleburne, Tex. v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S. 432, 439 (1985). U.S.
CONST. art. 1, § 2. For more legal analysis of the Equal Protection Clause, see Cong. Rsch. Serv., Equal Protection and
Rational Basis Review Generally
, CONSTITUTION ANNOTATED, https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/amdt14-
S1-8-1-2/ALDE_00000817/ (last visited Dec. 15, 2022).
125 Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620, 631 (1996).
126 Harvard v. Cesnalis, 973 F.3d 190, 205 (3d Cir. 2020) (citation omitted).
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fundamental right, the law will survive an equal-protection challenge so long as “it bears a
rational relation to some legitimate end”—a test known as rational-basis review.127
Potential challengers may argue that recognizing a Cherokee Delegate violates the voting rights
principle128 known as the “one-person, one-vote” rule.129 The Supreme Court has long held that
once the government grants the electorate the right to vote, the right must be exercised on equal
terms.130 The Equal Protection Clause thus prohibits any voting restrictions that “value one
person’s vote over that of another.”131 For example, the Supreme Court has held that the Equal
Protection Clause prohibits the “debasement or dilution of the weight of a citizen’s vote.”132 Vote
dilution
refers to “the idea that each vote must carry equal weight,” or that “each representative
must be accountable to (approximately) the same number of constituents.”133
The circumstances surrounding the constitutional validity of a Cherokee Delegate present unique
questions that go beyond the traditional apportionment context. For example, according to some
legal scholars, the seating of a Cherokee Delegate may infringe upon the equal-protection rights
of non-Cherokee citizens in two different ways.134 First, if only members of the Cherokee Nation
are represented by a Cherokee Delegate to Congress, and such members are also residents of one
of the fifty states, those individuals could be represented by both a full voting Member and a
Cherokee Delegate, thus potentially giving them a “super-vote”135 and double representation in
Congress.136 However, courts have ruled that territorial delegates’ privileges are not
unconstitutional legislative powers because, under internal House rules, they cannot affect the
“ultimate result” of legislative votes.137 The extent to which a Cherokee Delegate’s privileges are

127 Romer, 517 U.S. at 631.
128 The Supreme Court has long held that the right to vote is “of the most fundamental significance under our
constitutional structure.” Ill. State Bd. of Elections v. Socialist Workers Party, 440 U.S. 173, 184 (1979). Although
states retain the power to regulate elections, the federal government is constitutionally obligated “to avoid arbitrary and
disparate treatment of the members of its electorate.” Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98, 105 (2000). Constitutional challenges
to voting regulations are therefore often brought and analyzed under the equal protection framework.
129 The Court has held that the Equal Protection Clause mandates “one-person, one-vote,” a concept originating in the
1962 case Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186 (1962); see also Evenwel v. Abbott, 578 U.S. 54, 59 (2016) (noting “Baker’s
justiciability ruling set the stage for what came to be known as the one-person, one-vote principle”). Voting rights
jurisprudence has evolved since Baker, raising questions as to when certain conduct complies with the one-person, one-
vote principle and when these challenges are justiciable.
130 Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 554 (1964); Bush, 531 U.S. at 104.
131 Bush, 531 U.S. at 104–05.
132 Reynolds, 377 U.S. at 555.
133 Rucho v. Common Cause, 139 S. Ct. 2484, 2501 (2019); see also Reynolds, 377 U.S. at 590 (Harlan, J., dissenting)
(“[T]he Court’s argument boils down to the assertion that appellees’ right to vote has been invidiously ‘debased’ or
‘diluted’ by systems of apportionment which entitle them to vote for fewer legislators than other voters, an assertion
which is tied to the Equal Protection Clause only by the constitutionally frail tautology that ‘equal’ means ‘equal.’ ”).
134 Rosser, supra note 39, at 145.
135 The Supreme Court has explained that “[l]egislators represent people, not trees or acres. Legislators are elected by
voters, not farms or cities or economic interests.” Reynolds, 377 U.S. at 562. Accordingly, “the Equal Protection clause
requires the equalization of voter representation, not interest representation.” Morris v. Bd. of Estimate, 831 F.2d 384,
392 (2d Cir.), opinion corrected, 842 F.2d 23 (2d Cir. 1987). As one Justice phrased it, the Equal Protection Clause
forbids “the elevation of a small class of ‘supervoters’ granted an extraordinarily powerful franchise.” Brown v.
Thomson, 462 U.S. 835, 856 (1983) (Brennan, J., dissenting).
136 The Cherokee Nation’s constitution provides that a Cherokee Delegate (such as Ms. Teehee) shall be “appointed by
the Principal Chief and confirmed by the Council [tribal legislative body]” rather than elected. Constitution of the
Cherokee Nation, art. VI, § 12 (2003), https://www.cherokee.org/media/lsufapj1/constitution-of-the-cherokee-nation-
1999-online.pdf (last visited Dec. 15, 2022).
137 Rosser, supra note 39, at 148.
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limited in the same way as territorial delegates may bear on whether an unconstitutional “super-
vote” is created.
Second, if a tribal member were told to vote in either the election for a full voting Member or in
the election for the Cherokee Delegate, this could still result in a form of “super-vote” because
non-Cherokee voters would not have the same opportunity to “shop for the election in which their
vote would be most powerful.”138 Thus, according to at least one commentator, “through the
Cherokee delegate, non-Cherokees would see their representational rights diluted.”139
Some legal scholars suggest that the unique nature of tribal law and the historical context of the
treaties and past disenfranchisement practices toward Indians may factor into the constitutional
analysis.140 The Supreme Court has upheld legislation that “singles out Indians for particular and
special treatment” against equal-protection challenges “[a]s long as the special treatment can be
tied rationally to the fulfillment of Congress’ unique obligation toward the Indians.”141 For
example, in Morton v. Mancari, the Supreme Court upheld a classification-based law that
provided employment preference for qualified Indians in the Bureau of Indian Affairs.142 The
Court determined that the employment preference was not based on race, but rather the unique
political status of Indians and the relationship between tribes and the government.143 Although
Morton involved racial discrimination challenges in the employment context, the unique legal
status of federally recognized tribes and their members—and, in this case, the unique situation of
the Cherokee Tribe and the provision it negotiated in the New Echota Treaty—may factor into a
court’s analysis of an equal-protection challenge.144
A similar but distinct challenge could arise from other federally recognized tribes. If Congress
were to seat a Cherokee Delegate, other tribes may argue they are entitled to a tribal delegate
under equal-protection principles. For example, other federally recognized tribes may claim they
are denied equal protection under the law because members of the Cherokee Nation were granted
superior voting and representational power in Congress. These tribes may contend this results in
arbitrary and disparate treatment among Indian voters.
In analyzing such a challenge, a court would likely first determine whether the various tribes are
“similarly situated,” because equal-protection principles require that similarly situated individuals
be treated alike.145 Individuals are similarly situated when they are “alike in all relevant respects,”
but this does not mean “identically situated.”146 In the case of the Cherokee Tribe, the government
arguably created a non-self-executing promise of a delegate through a treaty.147 A treaty between
the United States and an Indian tribe is a “contract between two sovereign nations.”148 Therefore,

138 Id. at 145.
139 Id. at 146.
140 Id. at 149.
141 Id. at 555.
142 Id. at 537.
143 Id. at 551.
144 See Washington v. Confederated Bands & Tribes of Yakima Indian Nation, 439 U.S. 463, 500–01 (1979) (“It is
settled that ‘the unique legal status of Indian tribes under federal law’ permits the Federal Government to enact
legislation singling out tribal Indians, legislation that might otherwise be constitutionally offensive.”).
145 City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc., 473 U.S. 432, 439 (1985).
146 Harvard v. Cesnalis, 973 F.3d 190, 205 (3d Cir. 2020).
147 See supra p. 8 (discussing ways the pledge made under the delegate provision of the New Echota Treaty could be
interpreted).
148 Washington v. Wash. State Com. Passenger Fishing Vessel Ass’n, 443 U.S. 658, 675 (1979).
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it could be argued that successors-in-interest to the Cherokee signatories are not similarly situated
to other tribes because other tribes are not parties to the New Echota Treaty and possess no
similar treaty rights. Under that reasoning, no equal-protection violation would exist.149
In other equal-protection contexts regarding disparate treatment among Indian tribes, such as in
the federal tribal recognition process, courts have found that the recognition of Indian tribes is a
political rather than racial determination, and rational-basis review—rather than heightened
scrutiny—applies.150 When applying rational-basis review, a court must only find that “the
classification rationally further[s] a legitimate state interest.”151 In this context, Congress might
assert that it has a legitimate interest in executing treaty provisions.
Ultimately, the recognition of a Cherokee Delegate is a novel issue and one that cannot be easily
analogized to other existing equal-protection scenarios. As a result, current precedent cannot
definitively predict the outcome of such a challenge.
Justiciability
Even if a party raises an equal-protection claim challenging the constitutionality of the Cherokee
Delegate, a federal court could hear the case only if it determined that the challenge is justiciable.
Justiciability is a constitutional limitation established by the Supreme Court that refers to the
types of matters a court may adjudicate.152 According to the Court, “it is the province and duty of
the judicial department to say what the law is”; however, some claims of “unlawfulness” either
involve no judicially enforceable right or are more properly entrusted to another political
branch.153 Questions in this latter category are more commonly known as nonjusticiable “political
questions.”154
Since the Supreme Court’s 1962 decision in Baker v. Carr,155 courts have debated the
justiciability of equal-protection challenges to the one-person, one-vote principle, finding some
claims are political questions beyond the reach of the federal courts. In Baker, the Supreme Court
first recognized the justiciability of malapportionment claims.156 There, the Court held that a
Tennessee state legislative map that had not been redrawn in nearly sixty years, despite
substantial population growth and redistribution, was a challenge to the plaintiff’s equal-
protection rights that was “within the reach of judicial protection under the Fourteenth
Amendment” and a “justiciable constitutional cause of action.”157 In so holding, the Court set
forth six circumstances under which a claim might constitute a nonjusticiable political question:
1. a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate
political department;

149 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit engaged in a similar analysis in the context of federal recognition,
finding that one tribe may not be similarly situated to others on the basis of government-to-government interactions.
Muwekma Ohlone Tribe v. Salazar, 708 F.3d 209, 215 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (applying rational-basis scrutiny).
150 E.g., Agua Caliente Tribe of Cupeño Indians of Pala Rsrv. v. Sweeney, 932 F.3d 1207, 1220 (9th Cir. 2019).
151 Nordlinger v. Hahn, 505 U.S. 1, 10 (1992).
152 See generally Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 94–95 (1968) (explaining that justiciability is a “term of art” used to
describe the limitations placed on federal courts by the Constitution’s case-and-controversy doctrine).
153 Vieth v. Jubelirer, 541 U.S. 267, 277 (2004).
154 Id.
155 369 U.S. 186, 237 (1962).
156 Id.
157 Id.
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2. a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving the
claim;
3. the impossibility of deciding the claim without an initial policy determination of
a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion;
4. the impossibility of a court’s undertaking independent resolution of the claim
without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate branches of government;
5. an unusual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already
made; or
6. the potential for embarrassment from divergent pronouncements by various
departments on the same question.158
At bottom, the question often hinges on whether a claim is one involving a “legal right,
resolvable according to legal principles, or political questions that must find their resolution
elsewhere.”159
Beyond population deviations resulting in malapportionment, such as those presented in Baker,160
the Court has also found that claims of racial gerrymandering—districting plans that
unconstitutionally diminish the votes of racial minorities—present a justiciable equal-protection
claim.161 Recently, however, the Court determined that questions of political gerrymandering, or
“[t]he practice of dividing a geographical area into electoral districts, often of highly irregular
shape, to give one political party an unfair advantage by diluting the opposition’s voting
strength,”162 present political questions that are beyond the reach of the federal courts.163
According to the Court, the one-person, one-vote principle does not extend to political parties or
require that “each party must be influential in proportion to its number of supporters.”164 In a
similar vein, although the separation of powers principle limits the justiciability of challenges to
House rules—and a court may not order the House to adopt any particular rule165—courts
nevertheless retain “responsibility to say what rules Congress may not adopt because of
constitutional infirmity.”166
Whether a court would find a challenge to the Cherokee Delegate justiciable may depend on
several competing considerations, including who brings the challenge and how it is

158 Vieth, 541 U.S. at 277 (quoting Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S 186, 217 (1962)).
159 Rucho v. Common Cause, 139 S. Ct. 2484, 2494 (2019).
160 Baker, 369 U.S. at 193–95. See also Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1, 7–8 (1964); Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533,
568 (1964).
161 Davis v. Bandemer, 478 U.S. 109, 119 (1986) (“Our past decisions also make clear that even where there is no
population deviation among the districts, racial gerrymandering presents a justiciable equal protection claim. In the
multimember district context, we have reviewed, and on occasion rejected, districting plans that unconstitutionally
diminished the effectiveness of the votes of racial minorities.”), abrogated on other grounds by Rucho, 139 S. Ct. at
2484.
162 Vieth, 541 U.S. at 271 n.1.
163 Rucho, 139 S. Ct. at 2484.
164 Id. at 2501.
165 Michel v. Anderson, 817 F. Supp. 126, 138 (D.D.C. 1993), aff’d, 14 F.3d 623 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
166 Vander Jagt v. O’Neill, 699 F.2d 1166, 1173 (D.C. Cir. 1982).
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characterized.167 For example, some matters involving treaties may preclude judicial review.168
On the other hand, courts sometimes “interpret . . . treaties and . . . enforce domestic rights arising
from them.”169 In United States v. Decker, for example, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit held that the political question doctrine did not apply in an equal protection challenge to
regulations established pursuant to an Indian treaty.170
Beyond treaty considerations, a court could also consider justiciability factors utilized in
apportionment cases. Under such an analysis, a court may find that a traditional one-person, one-
vote question is justiciable under basic equal-protection principles.171 In Michel v. Anderson, the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit determined that a suit brought by House Members and
private voters raised a justiciable claim challenging House rule changes allowing territorial and
district delegates to vote in the Committee as a Whole.172
Conclusion
The New Echota Treaty’s Cherokee Delegate provision is in some respects novel, especially in
the context of its modern-day applicability. The historical background is complex, and it is not
clear how the signatories would have understood such a delegate’s role in the House. It seems
likely that some action by Congress would be necessary if it desires to implement the provision
today. Ultimately, it is possible that legal challenges could arise if a delegate is seated—such as
whether seating the Cherokee Delegate may present equal-protection challenges—but it is unclear
how a court would decide the issues of first impression, or whether it would find the challenges
justiciable at all.

167 The 1997 decision of Raines v. Byrd, which was issued after the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Michel, is likely to
inform the standing analysis of any potential legal challenge brought by Members of Congress. See Raines v. Byrd,
521 U.S. 811, 825 (1997) (holding that Member plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge an “abstract dilution of
institutional legislative power”). Even if a Member may otherwise have standing, courts have at times relied on the
prudential doctrine of equitable or remedial discretion to dismiss challenges to internal House matters brought by an
individual Member when the Member could “obtain substantial relief from his fellow legislators.” See Chenoweth v.
Clinton, 181 F.3d 112 (D.C. Cir. 1999). The current applicability of this doctrine is uncertain. See Campbell v. Clinton,
52 F. Supp. 2d 34, 40 (D.D.C.1999) (observing that “the separation of powers considerations previously evaluated
under the rubric of ripeness or equitable or remedial discretion now are subsumed in the standing analysis”).
168 See Ping v. United States, 130 U.S. 581, 602 (1889) (“The validity of this legislative release from the stipulations of
the treaties was, of course, not a matter for judicial cognizance. The question whether our government is justified in
disregarding its engagements with another nation is not one for the determination of the courts.”).
169 United States v. Decker, 600 F.2d 733, 737 (9th Cir. 1979).
170 Id. at 738.
171 See Rucho v. Common Cause, 139 S. Ct. 2484, 2496 (2019) (noting population inequality claims could be decided
based on “basic equal protection principles”).
172 Michel v. Anderson, 14 F.3d 623, 625–28 (D.C. Cir. 1994) (deciding that the challenge did not raise a nonjusticiable
political question and that doctrines counseling against adjudication of claims raised by Members did not apply to
claims brought by private citizens). See generally supra note 123 (discussing the Michel litigation).
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Legal and Procedural Issues Related to Seating a Cherokee Nation Delegate in the House


Author Information

Mainon A. Schwartz, Coordinator
Mark J. Oleszek
Legislative Attorney
Analyst on Congress and the Legislative Process


Whitney K. Novak

Legislative Attorney



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