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United States Senate Committee on Indian Affairs

Standing committee of the United States Senate


Standing committee of the United States Senate

FieldValue
nameSenate Indian Affairs Committee
typeselect-permanent
chambersenate
congress119th
statusactive
formedFebruary 11, 1977
chairLisa Murkowski
chair_partyR
chair_sinceJanuary 3, 2025
vice_chairBrian Schatz
vc_partyD
vc_sinceJanuary 3, 2025
seats11 members
majority1R
majority1_seats6
minority1D
minority1_seats5
subcommittees
website

The Senate Committee on Indian Affairs is a committee of the United States Senate charged with oversight in matters related to the American Indian, Native Hawaiian, and Alaska Native peoples. A Committee on Indian Affairs existed from 1820 to 1947, after which it was folded into the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. A new Native Affairs Committee was created in 1977, initially as a select committee, as a result of the detachment of indigenous affairs from the new Committee on Energy and National Resources, which had succeeded the old Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. The committee was initially intended to be temporary, but was made permanent in 1984. The committee tends to include senators from Western and Plains states, who have more Native American constituents.

History

Summary

In 1977, the Senate approved which re-established the Committee on Indian Affairs as a temporary select committee. The Select Committee was to disband at the close of the 95th Congress, but following several interim extensions, the Senate voted to make the Committee permanent on June 6, 1984. The committee has jurisdiction to study the unique problems of American Indian, Native Hawaiian, and Alaska Native peoples and to propose legislation to alleviate these difficulties. These issues include, but are not limited to, Native education, economic development, land management, trust responsibilities, health care, and claims against the United States. Additionally, all legislation proposed by Members of the Senate that specifically pertains to American Indians, Native Hawaiians, or Alaska Natives is under the jurisdiction of the committee.

Early era

Until 1946, when the Legislative Reorganization Act abolished both the House and Senate Committees on Indian Affairs, the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs had been in existence since the early 19th century. After 1946, Native affairs legislative and oversight jurisdiction was vested in subcommittees of the Interior and Insular Affairs Committees of the House of Representatives and the Senate. While this subcommittee arrangement may not have specifically reflected a diminishment of the consideration given Native affairs by the Congress, the revised arrangement historically coincided with a 20-year hiatus in Native affairs known as the "Termination Era" – a period in which the prevailing policy of the United States was to terminate the Federal relationship with Native tribes or transfer jurisdiction over tribal lands to the states.

By the mid-1960s, this Termination philosophy was in decline as a failed policy and the Congress began to include Native tribes in legislation designed to rebuild the social infrastructure of the Nation and provide economic opportunities for economically depressed areas. In the early 1970s the Termination era was decisively ended with the enactment of the Menominee Restoration Act of 1973. Although a number of important legislative initiatives affecting Natives were enacted in the early 1970s, it became clear that the existing subcommittee structure was not providing an adequate forum for legislating appropriate solutions to problems confronting Native country. Legislative jurisdiction over Native affairs was fragmented among a number of committees. Overall, more than 10 committees in the Congress were responsible for Indian affairs, a situation which resulted in a sometimes disjointed treatment of Native affairs and in an often haphazard development of Federal Native policy.

Re-establishment of committee

In 1973, Senator James Abourezk introduced to establish a Federal commission to review all aspects of policy, law, and administration relating to affairs of the United States with American Native tribes and people. The Senate and the House of Representatives both adopted S.J. Res. 133 and on January 2, 1975, the Resolution was signed into law by the President, thus establishing the American Indian Policy Review Commission. As the work of this Commission progressed, it became readily apparent that a full Senate committee with full legislative and oversight authority was needed to receive the report of the American Indian Policy Review Commission and to act upon its recommendations. Indeed, one of the final recommendations of the Commission was that a full-fledged Native Affairs Committee be established in the Senate.

At the same time the Commission was formulating its recommendation for the establishment of a Native Affairs Committee, the Senate was developing a far-reaching proposal for reorganization of the entire Senate committee system. Under this proposal, the Subcommittee on Indian Affairs under the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs was to be abolished with its natural resource functions to be distributed among other newly formed Senate committees and its human resources functions to be transferred to the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources. In view of the pending report of the American Indian Policy Review Commission and its anticipated recommendations, however, the Senate revamped its committee reorganization proposal to include the establishment of a temporary select committee to receive the Commission's report and to act on its recommendations. Thus, there was included within of February 4, 1977, the Committee System Reorganization Amendments of 1977, a provision to establish a Select Committee on Native Affairs with full jurisdiction over all proposed legislation and other matters relating to Native affairs. With the commencement of the 96th Congress, the Select Committee on Indian Affairs was to expire and jurisdiction over Native matters was to be transferred to the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources.

As the Select Committee on Indian Affairs grappled with the report of the American Indian Policy Review Commission and the many other Native issues that were presented to it during the 95th Congress, it became increasingly evident that if the Congress was to continue to meet its constitutional, legal, and historical responsibilities in the area of Native affairs, an ongoing legislative committee with adequate expertise and resources should be re-established in the Senate.

, to make the Select Committee on Indian Affairs a permanent committee of the Senate, was introduced by Senator Abourezk on February 22, 1978. The measure was amended by the Rules Committee to extend the life of the committee for two years until January 2, 1981, and was agreed to by the Senate on October 14, 1978. In the 96th Congress, Senator John Melcher, who at the time was chair of the Select Committee, introduced to make it a permanent committee. The Resolution had 28 cosponsors, and was reported by the Rules Committee with an amendment to extend the select committee to January 2, 1984, and to expand the membership to seven members commencing in the 97th Congress. S. Res. 448 was adopted by the Senate on December 11, 1980.

Permanent committee

On April 28, 1983, Senator Mark Andrews, Chair of the Select Committee on Indian Affairs in the 98th Congress, introduced to make the committee a permanent committee. This Resolution had 28 cosponsors. On November 1, 1983, the Committee on Rules and Administration voted unanimously to report the Resolution without amendment, and the Resolution was so reported on November 2, 1983 (S. Rept. 98–294). On November 18, the last day of the first session of the 98th Congress, the Senate agreed to an extension of the select committee to July 1, 1984, in order to allow time for later debate. By the time the Resolution was brought to the floor for consideration there were 60 cosponsors. On June 4, 1984, the Select Committee on Indian Affairs was made a permanent committee of the Senate. In 1993, the Select Committee on Indian Affairs was redesignated as the Committee on Indian Affairs.

Members, 119th Congress

Main article: 119th United States Congress

MajorityMinority

Historical committee membership

118th Congress

Main article: 118th United States Congress

MajorityMinority

117th Congress

Main article: 117th United States Congress

MajorityMinority

116th Congress

Main article: 116th United States Congress

MajorityMinority

115th Congress

Main article: 115th United States Congress

MajorityMinority

Source

Chairs

Chairs of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, 1820–1947

NamePartyStateStartEnd
Democratic-RepublicanMS18201821
Democratic-RepublicanLA18211823
Democratic-Republican
(1823–1825)MO18231828
Jacksonian
(1825–1828)
DemocraticTN18281832
DemocraticGA18321833
WhigTN18331840
DemocraticAR18401841
WhigKY18411842
WhigIN18421845
DemocraticAR18451846
DemocraticAL18461847
DemocraticMO18471853
DemocraticAR18531861
RepublicanWI18611867
RepublicanMO18671869
RepublicanIA18691873
RepublicanCT18731875
RepublicanIA18751879
DemocraticTX18791881
RepublicanMA18811893
DemocraticAR18931895
RepublicanSD18951899
RepublicanNE18991901
RepublicanNV19011905
RepublicanMN19051911
RepublicanSD19111913
DemocraticMO19131914
DemocraticAZ19141919
RepublicanKS19191921
RepublicanMO19211923
RepublicanOK19231927
RepublicanND19271933
DemocraticMT19331936
DemocraticOK19361945
DemocraticWY19451947

From 1947 to 1977, Indian affairs were the responsibility of the Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, which was superseded by the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources in 1977.

Chairs of the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs, 1977–1993

NamePartyStateStartEnd
DemocraticSD19771979
DemocraticMT19791981
RepublicanME19811983
RepublicanND19831987
DemocraticHI19871993

Chairs of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, 1993–present

NamePartyStateStartEnd
DemocraticHI19931995
RepublicanAZ19951997
RepublicanCO19972001
DemocraticHI2001
RepublicanCO2001
DemocraticHI20012003
RepublicanCO20032005
RepublicanAZ20052007
DemocraticND20072011
DemocraticHI20112013
DemocraticWA20132014
DemocraticMT20142015
RepublicanWY20152017
RepublicanND20172021
DemocraticHI20212025
RepublicanAK2025present

Vice chairs

The committee refers to its ranking minority member as vice chair.

NamePartyStateStartEnd
RepublicanOK19771979
RepublicanCO1979
RepublicanOR19791981
DemocraticMT19811987
RepublicanWA19871989
RepublicanAZ19891995
DemocraticHI19952001
RepublicanCO20012003
DemocraticHI20032005
DemocraticND20052007
RepublicanWY2007
RepublicanAK20072009
RepublicanWY20092015
DemocraticMT20152017
DemocraticNM20152021
RepublicanAK20212025
DemocraticHI2025present

References

References

  1. Adlai, Stevenson. (February 4, 1977). "S.Res.4 - 95th Congress (1977-1978): Committee System Reorganization Amendments".
  2. § 105, {{USBill. 95. sres. 4, [[95th Congress]], 1st session
  3. {{USPL. 93. 580
  4. {{USBill. 98. sres. 127, [[98th Congress]], 2nd session
  5. § 25, {{USBill. 103. sres. 71, [[103rd Congress]], 1st session
  6. {{USBill. 119. SRes. 16 (119th Congress)
  7. {{USBill. 119. SRes. 17 (119th Congress)
  8. {{USBill. 118. SRes. 30 (118th Congress)
  9. {{USBill. 118. SRes. 31 (118th Congress)
  10. "U.S. Senate: Committee on Indian Affairs".
  11. "About".
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