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Elizabeth Warren Apologizes to Cherokee Nation for DNA Test

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the Massachusetts Democrat who is running for her party’s presidential nomination, has privately apologized to the Cherokee Nation for her decision to take a DNA test to prove her Native American ancestry, a move that had angered some tribal leaders and ignited a significant political backlash.
Elizabeth Warren Apologizes to Cherokee Nation for DNA Test
Elizabeth Warren Apologizes to Cherokee Nation for DNA Test

The apology comes as Warren is set to formally kick off her presidential run this month after recent visits to early nominating states like Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina. It also comes after repeated calls for her to apologize from tribal leaders, political operatives and her own advisers, who said her October decision to take the DNA test gave undue credence to the controversial claim that race could be determined by blood — and politically, played into President Donald Trump’s hands.

Trump has repeatedly mocked Warren for her decades-old claim of Native American ancestry, using slurs such as “Pocahontas” to dismiss her and recently saying she fell for his “Pocahontas trap.” However, when Warren hit back at Trump and released a DNA test to prove her ancestry, she angered members of the Native American community and left-leaning Democrats who believe cultural kinship and tribal sovereignty determines Native citizenship — not blood.

On Thursday, Warren called Bill John Baker, principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, to apologize for the DNA test, said Julie Hubbard, a spokeswoman for the tribe. She called it a “brief and private” conversation.

Warren’s campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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“I understand that she apologized for causing confusion on tribal sovereignty and tribal citizenship and the harm that has resulted,” Hubbard said. “The chief and secretary of state appreciate that she has reaffirmed that she is not a Cherokee Nation citizen or a citizen of any tribal nation.”

The apology, which was first reported by The Intercept, is a break from Warren’s previous public stance. For months, Warren has refused to acknowledge or respond to her critics on the left, focusing instead on responding to Trump’s flurry of more openly divisive attacks, which have included language associated with racist stereotypes.

Advisers close to Warren said she has long expressed private concern that she may have damaged her relationships to Native American groups and her own standing with activists, particularly those who are racial minorities. However, as recently as December, Warren defended the decision to take a DNA test in an interview with The New York Times.

“I put it out there. It’s on the internet for anybody to see,” Warren said in December. “People can make of it what they will. I’m going to continue fighting on the issues that brought me to Washington.”

Her reversal has now drawn intense reactions from critics and supporters across the ideological spectrum.

On Thursday, as news circulated that Warren expressed some regret to the Cherokee Nation chief, some of her most prominent critics in the Native American community said it was a step in the right direction — but a more public reckoning remained necessary.

“I’m glad to see that Elizabeth Warren has apologized for the whole DNA test debacle,” tweeted Kelly Hayes, a Native American writer who has followed Warren’s claims. “Connecting w members of the Cherokee nation in this way was always the way forward. Also, I hope that the folks who painted myself and others as fringe outliers for discussing this feel foolish.”

“This still isn’t transparent,” said Twila Barnes, a Cherokee genealogist who has been critical of Warren’s claims of native ancestry since it became national news in 2012. “She needs to go public and say she fully takes responsibility and that the DNA test was ridiculous. There still something about this that feels off.”

The reaction was more split among political operatives, both nationally and in key early voting states like Iowa.

Dave Degner, the Democratic board chair in Tama County, Iowa, said the controversy has had minimal influence, and he has yet to hear any voters bring up the issue. Steve Drahozal, the chair of the Dubuque County Democrats in Iowa, said he was glad Warren admitted fault.

Brian Fallon, former national press secretary for Hillary Clinton, said he hopes the apology means Warren can put the issue behind her.

“It seemed from the beginning that the DNA test was an honest attempt to prevent Trump’s racist attacks from being indulged in the media, and she has seemed genuinely surprised and contrite regarding the reaction from the tribal community,” Fallon said. “It makes sense to seek to repair that relationship because in every other sense, her successful rollout pretty successfully helped her move beyond this controversy. Now it deserves to be fully behind her.”

Hubbard said the Cherokee Nation believes the call was prompted by a Wednesday opinion column in the Tulsa World by Chuck Hoskin Jr., the secretary of state of the Cherokee Nation. In the column, Hoskin said Warren is not a Cherokee citizen, even though her genetic test results showed strong evidence that she has a Native American pedigree “6-10 generations ago.”

Warren’s test did not take into account that, for most Native Americans, culture and kinship is what creates tribal membership — not blood, he said.

“This concept of family is key to understanding why citizenship matters,” Hoskin wrote. “That is why it offends us when some of our national leaders seek to ascribe inappropriately membership or citizenship to themselves. They would be welcome to our table as friends, but claiming to be family to gain a spot at the table is unwelcome.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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