Navajo Nation Council

The Navajo Nation Council (Navajo: Béésh bąąh dah siʼání) is the legislative branch of the Navajo Nation government. The council meets four times per year, with additional special sessions, at the Navajo Nation Council Chamber, which is in Window Rock, Arizona.

24th Navajo Nation Council
Béésh bąąh dah siʼání
Leadership
Seth Damon
Seats24 Delegates
Elections
Last election
November 6, 2018
Next election
November 6, 2022
Meeting place
Navajo Nation Council Chamber
Website
http://www.navajonationcouncil.org/

The council is composed of 24 district delegates, or councilors, chosen by direct election, who represent 110 municipal chapters within the states of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. Delegates must be members of the Navajo Nation and be at least twenty-five years of age. Delegate offices are at the Navajo Nation governmental campus in Window Rock.

The council selects a speaker, chosen from among all delegates, to preside over the day-to-day functions of the council for a two-year term.

Power and jurisdiction

As codified in Section 101 of the Navajo Nation Code: (2 N.N.C. § 101(A)) The Legislative Branch shall consist of the Navajo Nation Council and any entity established under the Navajo Nation Council. (2 N.N.C § 101(B)) The Legislative Branch shall not be amended unless approved by majority of all registered Navajo voters through a referendum.[1]

(2 N.N.C. § 102 (B-G)) The Navajo Nation Council reserves all powers not delegated and supervises those that are delegated; has the power to discipline and regulate the conduct of its members; has the authority to promulgate rules, regulations, and procedures for the conduct of its meetings and of its committees; confirms the appointments of all division directors upon recommendation from the appropriate oversight committee; and shall establish standing committees and delegate such authority to such committees as it deems necessary and proper.[2][3]

Line of succession

§1006 of the Navajo Code instructs that should vacancy occur in the Office of President and Vice President, the Speaker shall serve as President of the Navajo Nation until a special election is held. The Code further states that the Speaker shall then act concurrently as Speaker and President, and that the speakership shall not be considered vacated.[4]

24th Council delegates

On January 16, 2019, the delegates to the 24th Navajo Nation Council took the oath of office and elected Seth Damon as Speaker.[5]

Delegate[6] Chapter[6]
Elmer Begay Dilcon, Indian Wells, Teesto, Whitecone, Greasewood Springs
Kee Allen Begay, Jr. Tachee/Blue Gap, Many Farms, Nazlini, Tselani/Cottonwood, Low Mountain
Paul Begay Coppermine, K'aii'to, LeChee, Tonalea/Red Lake, Bodaway/Gap
Nelson S. BeGaye Lukachukai, Round Rock, Tsaile/Wheatfields, Tse Ch'izhi, Rock Point
Nathaniel Brown Chilchinbeto, Dennehotso, Kayenta
Eugenia Charles-Newton Shiprock
Amber Kanazbah Crotty Cove, Toadlena/Two Grey Hills, Red Valley Tse'alnaozt'i'i', Sheepsprings, Beclabito, Gadiiahi/To'Koi
Seth Damon Baahaali, Chilchiltah, Manuelito, Red Rock, Rock Springs, Tsayatoh
Herman Daniels, Jr. Tsah Bii Kin, Navajo Mountain, Shonto, Oljato
Mark Freeland Becenti, Lake Valley, Nahodishgish, Standing Rock, Whiterock, Huerfano, Nageezi, Crownpoint
Pernell Halona Coyote Canyon, Mexican Springs, Naschitti, Tohatchi, Bahastl'a'a'
Jamie Henio Alamo, Ramah, Tohajiilee
Vince R. James Jeddito, Cornfields, Ganado, Kinlichee, Steamboat
Rickie Nez T'iistoh Sikaad, Nenahnezad, Upper Fruitland, Tse' Daa' Kaan, Newcomb, San Juan
Raymond Smith, Jr. Klagetoh, Wide Ruins, Houck, Lupton, Nahata Dziil
Wilson Stewart, Jr. Crystal, Fort Defiance, Red Lake, Sawmill
Charlaine Tso Mexican Water, To'likan, Teesnospos, Aneth, Red Mesa
Daniel Tso Littlewater, Pueblo Pintado, Torreon, Whitehorse Lake, Baca/Brewitt, Casamero Lake, Ojo Encino, Counselor
Eugene Tso Chinle
Otto Tso To' Nanees Dizi
Thomas Walker, Jr. Cameron, Coalmine Canyon, Birdsprings, Leupp, Tolani Lake
Edison Wauneka Oaksprings, St. Michaels
Edmund Yazzie Churchrock, Iyanbito, Mariano Lake, Pinedale, Smith Lake, Thoreau
Jimmy Yellowhair Hard Rock, Forest Lake, Pinon, Black Mesa, Whippoorwill
Navajo Council

Standing committees

  • Naabik’íyáti’ Committee
    • Subcommittee on Sacred Sites
    • Subcommittee on Government Reform
    • Gaming Task-force Subcommittee
    • Sih Hasin Fund Subcommittee
  • Budget and Finance Committee
  • Law and Order Committee
  • Resources and Development Committee
  • Health, Education, and Human Services Committee

The standing committees are listed at the Navajo Nation Council website.[7]

History

Naachʼid

The Diné (Navajo) created the ceremonial gatherings called Naachʼid which met every 2–4 years, or on an emergency basis as needed.

The traditional Navajo government was organized around the principles of Hózhǫ́ǫ́jí dóó Hashkééjí, the nurturing and protecting aspects of governance. Each Navajo clan chose two representatives to attend these assemblies, with the purpose of protecting and nurturing the Diné. An individual selected to participate in that council was called naalchʼid. The Hashkééjí Naatʼááh, translated as war chief, protected the people from any harm as they moved away from the principles of Hózhǫ́ǫ́jí.

The Hózhǫ́ǫ́jí Naatʼááh, or peace chief, nurtured each individual, assisting the people to live in accordance with the principles of kʼé (peace and friendship) and to maintain relationships with all creation.[8][9][10]

1922 to the 15th council

Former Navajo Council delegate Katherine Benally [left] speaking to her constituency after the defeat of the proposed Navajo-Hopi Little Colorado River Water Rights Settlement Act.

The Navajo Business Council was created in 1922 by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior in order to certify mineral leases on the Navajo reservation. At its first meeting, the council acquiesced to U.S. pressure to grant oil companies use of the land. In return, the Navajo Nation was promised more land that could be used for subsistence farming and sheep grazing. This first council was headed by Henry Chee Dodge and consisted of one delegate elected from each of the five agencies, along with one alternate delegate.

After refusing to adopt Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier's Indian Reorganization Act in 1934, the Navajo Tribal Council reformed in 1937. The Navajo voters would ultimately reject three attempts at establishing a constitutional government over disagreement of lasting legal language.

Until 1984, the Navajo Tribal Council and Navajo Nation had been supported by funding from the wealth of natural resources on the reservation. However, in 1984, the council established the Permanent Trust Fund into which 12% of all revenue each year would be deposited. Funds would first become available in 2004.

16th council (1987–1990)

The name Navajo Nation Council (sometimes called the Navajo Nation Tribal Council) came into use around the middle of 1989. The name change occurred with the Title II Amendments of 1989 which established the three-branch government system used at Window Rock today. This created a clear delineation of executive and legislative powers, vested leadership of the executive branch in the President and Vice President, and created the offices of Speaker of the Council and Speaker Pro Tem.[11]

17th council (1991–1994)

The 17th council was seated in 1991.

18th council (1995–1998)

The 18th council was seated in January 1995.

19th council (1999–2002)

The 19th council was seated in January 1999.

In 2001, the council approved a service agreement with OnSat, a Utah-based Internet provider. OnSat was to receive $1.9 million in the first year of contract to provide the 110 chapters with satellite bandwidth.[12]

20th council (2003–2006)

The 20th council was seated in January 2003. Business conducted soon after included the election of Lawrence T. Morgan as Speaker of the Council.

  • BCDS Manufacturing Inc.
    • From 2003 to 2007, the council had heavily invested in a biochemical firm to expand operations in Shiprock chapter. The firm's chief executive officer was later found to be embezzling tribal assets for personal use. These findings were never used to file criminal or civil complaints against BCDS, their executives, or share holders.
    • The council aimed to partner with BCDS, an industrial investment successfully advocated for by the Shiprock chapter board, to build an economic industrial base there. Beginning in 2003, and through 2004, the Navajo government invested an estimated $300,000 in the company and retained a 51% ownership stake. BCDS had originally proposed to switch operational function and expand its facility in Shiprock chapter. The loan guarantee ultimately would cost the Navajo Nation some $2 million USD. The loan came from a tribal fund used as collateral for small businesses.[13]
  • Permanent trust fund
    • Fund matures.

Mid-term

In 2005, Speaker Lawrence T. Morgan was elected for his second term as Speaker of the Council.

  • BCDS Manufacturing Inc.
    • In 2005, the council allowed BCDS to receive a loan upwards of two million dollars from the Navajo Dam escrow account.[14] None of the monies were used for their originally intended purpose. It was reported later that over $1,000,000 was spent on the lavish lifestyle of the CEO and on luxury homes at Aztec and Farmington, NM.[15]
  • OnSat
    • Later in 2005, a tribal audit found discrepancies regarding a service contract with internet provider OnSat Technologies, to provide the chapters with wireless bandwidth.

21st council (2007–2010)

The 21st council was seated in January 2007. Speaker Lawrence T. Morgan was elected for a third term after winning a run-off election against Fort Defiance delegate Harold Wauneka.

  • BCDS Manufacturing Inc.
    • In June 2007, Budget and Finance Committee chairman Lorenzo Bates revealed that the council did not exercise prudent enough due diligence before investing in BCDS.[16]
    • In a July 17, 2008, special session, the Council declared involvement with BCDS a total loss.
  • OnSat
    • A 2007 tribal audit found that OnSat had over-billed for service, and that the tribe had not complied with procurement policy regarding the competitive bidding process to select OnSat. OnSat found its federal E-rate program agreements in jeopardy. The program reimbursed between 85% and 90% of the costs associated to provide internet services to the tribe’s 110 municipal chapter houses.

2008

President announces election to reduce council to 24

On April 29, Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley Jr. announced a special initiative in his office to reduce the Navajo Council to 24 members, from the 88 members of its 2008 chamber. The election would change the dynamics of the council in 2011.[17]

  • OnSat
    • OnSat service was disrupted in 2008 over nonpayment disagreements.
  • BCDS
    • In December 2008, the tribe and the council were forced to pay outstanding debt related to the bad loan made to BCDS in 2005. JP Morgan Chase received $2.2 million from tribal accounts.[12]

Mid-term

In January 2009, Speaker Morgan was re-elected speaker, to a fourth term. The election made him the first speaker to serve eight years in that capacity in the council's modern history. President Shirley addressed the council in the annual State of the Navajo Nation address on January 24, 2009. Shirley spoke of his conviction of the need to develop a new governing document for the Navajo Nation. Shirley had campaigned to return government to the Diné by government reform.

  • Shirley ouster
    • The first week of October 2009 saw the council meet in private and special sessions. Then on October 26, the council voted 48–22 to remove President Shirley from his official duties. The council had originally included Vice-President Shelley's removal. Allegations had been swirling around the four-corners states alleging improper dealings with Utah-based OnSat Technologies, and a biochemical company at Shiprock, New Mexico.[18] Shirley's chief of staff and other members of the senior staff were also removed. It was suggested that Shirley's removal was an act of retaliation by members of the 88-seat council, upset with Shirley's support of the proposed 64-member reduction in Council membership.
    • OnSat CEO Dave Stephens and former Navajo Nation Telecommunications Regulatory Office director Ernest Franklin were not targeted in this action.[19]
    • On October 27, 2009, members of the council released a statement addressing the allegations of retaliation and denying them.[20]
  • Discretionary spending
    • In December 2009, the council called for a special prosecutor to look into the Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley Jr.'s relationship with two companies that had operated on the reservation. Attorney General Louis Denetsosie focused the investigation on the tribe's contractual relationship with the Utah-based satellite internet company OnSat; the $2.2 million loan guarantee to BCDS Manufacturing Inc.; and payments from the council's discretionary fund to family members of several legislative-branch employees.[21]
  • 24 votes and the presidential line-item veto
    • In a Dec. 15, 2009, special election, tribal members voted 61% in favor of reducing the Navajo Nation Council from 88 to 24 members. In the same election, tribal members voted 59% in favor of empowering the Navajo president with line-item-veto power.[22]

2010

At the meeting of the council on January 13, 2010, council delegate Jonnathan Nez announced changes, to Title 22 of the Navajo Nation Code, that would take place in the wake of the majority of the tribe's membership voting to reduce the size of the council to 24 members.[23] In a May 28, 2010, decision, the Navajo Nation Supreme Court ordered immediate implementation of a redistricting plan.

  • Probe of the council's discretionary funds
    • In January 2010, the special division of the Window Rock district court—after a three-judge panel reviewed three applications on January 20, 2010—named Alan Balaran as special prosecutor, to begin work in early February of that year. Balaran (who served as the court-appointed special master in the Cobell Indian Trust Fund case) would act under the jurisdiction of the special division. Later, his investigation was expanded to include a tribal ranch program and discretionary funds given to the Shirley administration.[24]
    • In October 2010, a special prosecutor for the Navajo justice department filed charges against members of the then 88-member Navajo Council, three weeks before the November 2nd election.[25] The investigation returned findings of serious misuse of discretionary funds. The funds were designed to be made available at the direction of lawmakers for any number of community causes, activities, and emergencies deemed appropriate by council delegates.[26]
    • Attorney General Denetsosie outlined allegations that centered on an elaborate conspiracy of members of the council to give discretionary funds to family members. The scheme involved participating members hiding the transactions behind the vagueness of the law establishing the funds, and the loosely audited dispersal of funds from the legislators' offices. The investigation and trials would continue to the end of the 22nd council.
    • Suspected delegates were served official complaints just before the council convened for the fourth day of their 2010 fall session.
    • At the beginning of November 2010, the council was unhappy with the special prosecutor's focus on the legislature's misuse of discretionary funds, and organized the removal of several functionaries the council thought responsible. On November 4, 2010, the council voted 42–0, with two delegates abstaining, to order legislation terminating the employment of Attorney General Denetsosie and his deputy, D. Harrison Tso.[27]
    • On December 23, the council opposed the removal of the deputy attorney general, in a 65–3 vote. Another bill to remove the attorney general was introduced but not debated.[28]

22nd council (2011–2014)

24 Votes

On January 11, 2011, the new, reduced-in-size, 24-member council was seated, and restructuring of the legislative branch began. On January 24, 2011, delegate Johnny Naize (Blue Gap-Tachee/Cottonwood-Tselani/Low Mountain/Many Farms/Nazlini) was selected as speaker.[29]

In May 2011, President Ben Shelly signed council resolution CAP-10-11, sent to him by the council, amending Title II of the Navajo Code. Among the changes in the law was the reorganization of existing standing committees to match the 24 vote membership.[3]

Mid-term

In January 2013, the council reelected Speaker Naize to a second term.

  • BCDS
    • In 2013, Hak Ghun, 62, of Durango, Colorado, was found guilty of tax evasion regarding his involvement with misdealings at BCDS.[30] It was found that Ghun had funneled $1,078,170 in corporate funds to his personal accounts between 2005 and 2007, and had failed to pay taxes to the IRS.
  • Discretionary spending debacle and resignation of Speaker Naize
    • The misuse of tribal assets by council members continued to plague the 22nd council as it did the 21st. In December 2013, a special prosecutor appointed by the council charged Speaker Naize with conspiracy and bribery. Naize was charged along with former delegates Lawrence T. Morgon, David Tom, Lena Manheimer, and George Arthur in misusing over $186,000.[31]
    • On March 11, 2014, Speaker Naize, charged with 10 counts of bribery and one count of conspiracy, pleaded not guilty to misusing $35,550 and diverting the funds to members of his family.[32] On April 4, 2014, Naize was removed from the speakership through forced paid leave via a unanimous vote. On April 7, 2014, Naize filed a petition with the Navajo court to restrain the council from taking action. Speaker Pro Tem LoRenzo Bates took over the duties of the speakership.[33] Naize resigned his delegate seat at noon on Sept 29, 2014.[34] Later that year, Speaker Naize changed his plea to guilty, after resigning from his district seat. Many Farms chapter’s grazing official and former council candidate Roland Tso was appointed to serve the unexpired term of Naize's delegate seat; Tso was sworn in on November 14, 2014.[35]
    • Delegate David L. Tom resigned in October 2014, late in his term, after pleading guilty to the charge of conspiracy to commit bribery, prosecutors alleging that Tom and funneled $95,000 in tribal funds to his wife and children.[36] Tom was replaced by former interim Navajo President Leonard Hoskie who was sworn in on December 1, 2014, to finish Tom's term.[37]
  • Navajo code crisis
    • On October 24, just after midnight, the council passed legislation amending the Navajo Nation Code. In an 11-10-3 vote, the legislation dissolved the language requirement of the qualifications sections for president. The legislation would have retroactively allowed for Chris Deschene's participation.[38] On October 29, President Shelly vetoed the bill.[39]
    • On the first day of 2015, the council convened to hear a bill that would provide for holding primary and general elections in June and August 2015. The legislation passed the chamber in a controversial 11–1 vote, with over half of the body absent.[40] On Monday, January 5, President Shelly, in the twilight of his first term in office, vetoed the bill.[41]
    • January 7, five assistant-attorneys-general filed petition with the Navajo Nation Supreme Court for clarification on the question of the presidential vacancy issue. Through a controversial agreement and resolution,[42] referenced as CD-80-14 and CD-81-14, the court and the council—with Speaker Pro Tem LoRenzo Bates; delegate Leonard Tsosie; Otto Tso, councilman-elect; and Amber K. Crotty, director Diné Policy Institute as signatories—appointed Ben Shelly to act as interim president. The move was in contradiction to Navajo Code § 1006.

23rd council (2015–2018)

The newly elected 23rd Navajo Nation Council was inaugurated on January 13, 2015, in Window Rock, Arizona. Following the inauguration, delegates convened in special session to select a speaker pro tem to serve in that capacity until a speaker was selected by the council to serve a two-year term. Council delegate Kee Allen Begay, Jr. (Low Mountain, Many Farms, Nazlini, Tachee/Blue Gap, Tselani/Cottonwood) was elected speaker pro tem by a coin toss after he and former Speaker Pro Tem LoRenzo Bates each received 12 votes. Begay served as speaker pro tem until the start of the winter session on January 26, 2015, after which former Speaker Pro Tem LoRenzo Bates won the speakership, after a runoff election with Alton Joe Shepherd (Jeddito, Cornfields, Ganado, Kinlichee, Steamboat) where each received 12 votes, after which Shepard withdrew his candidacy, "for the council to unite and work together".

24th council (2019-)

On January 15, 2019, the 24th Navajo Nation Council took their oath of office at noon during the 2019 Navajo Nation Inauguration at the Bee Holdzil Fighting Scouts Events Center in Fort Defiance, Ariz. Following the inaugural event, the 24-member council convened for a special session to consider Legislation No. 0001-19 to select a speaker pro tem. Through a simple majority vote by Council members, Council Delegate Seth Damon (Bááháálí, Chichiltah, Manuelito, Tsé Lichíí’, Rock Springs, Tsayatoh) was selected as speaker pro tem. [43] On January 28, 2019, opening day of the 2019 Winter Council Session Speaker Pro Tem Seth Damon was voted in as Speaker of the 24th Navajo Nation Council.

Speakers of the Navajo Nation Council

  • Nelson Gorman Jr. (Chinle) (1995–1997)
  • Kelsey A Begaye (Kaibito) (1997–1999)
  • Edward T. Begay (Church Rock) (1999–2003)
  • Lawrence T. Morgan (Pinedale) (2003–2011; 4 consecutive terms)
  • Johnny Naize (2011–2014; 2 consecutive terms, resigned)
  • LoRenzo Bates, (2014–2015; Installed after Naize removal & resignation) Speaker Pro Tem
  • Kee Allen Begay Jr. (January 15–26, 2015) Speaker Pro Tem
  • Lorenzo Bates (January 26, 2015 – January 28, 2019)
  • Seth Damon (January 28, 2019 – Present)

Notable delegates

Council Delegate Kenneth Maryboy informing his supports of Peter Macdonald's endorsement (2010)

References

  1. "Navajo Nation Code, Annotated: Titles 1–5" (PDF). Navajo Nation Council. 2010. p. 83. Retrieved January 24, 2017.
  2. Navajo Nation Code 2010, pp. 83–4.
  3. "CAP-10-11: Resolution of the Navajo Nation Council" (PDF). Navajo Nation Council. 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 26, 2011. Retrieved January 23, 2017.
  4. Navajo Nation Code 2010, pp. 202–3.
  5. Holgate, Jolene (January 16, 2019). "24th Navajo Nation Council takes office and elects Council Delegate Seth Damon as Speaker Pro Tem" (PDF) (Press release). 24th Navajo Nation Council: Office of the Speaker. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
  6. "Council Delegates". 24th Navajo Nation Council. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
  7. "22nd Navajo Nation Council Standing Committees" (PDF). Navajo Nation Council. December 10, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 23, 2017.
  8. http://www.ongd.navajo.org/files/dpiStudyReport.pdf pg25 /* note: this address used earlier does not exist. */
  9. David E. Wilkins,"The Navajo Political Experience", 1999, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., Pages 70–71.
  10. For the spelling of Navajo terms: Young, Robert W & William Morgan, Sr. The Navajo Language. A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary. University of New Mexico Press. Albuquerque, NM: 1987.
  11. David E. Wilkins, "The Navajo Political Experience", 2003, Rowman & LIttlefield Publishers, Inc., Pages 92–95.
  12. "Marley Shebala's Notebook". dineresourcesandinfocenter.org. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  13. "Special prosecutor to probe allegations of illegal behavior of some Navajo Nation employees". gaeatimes.com. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  14. "Man behind failed BCDS deal faces tax evasion charges". Navajo Times. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  15. "The Navajo Times Online". Navajo Times. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  16. "Indian Country". Indian Country News. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  17. Hardeen, George (April 29, 2008). "Navajo President Joe Shirley, Jr., launches government reform initiative, submits language to reduce Council to 24 members, obtain line item veto" (PDF). The Navajo Nation (Press release). Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  18. "Navajo lawmakers put tribal president on leave". East Valley Tribune. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  19. Publisher. "Navajo President 'disappointed' with council action". nativetimes.com. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  20. "Navajo Nation suspends president". Indian Country Today Media Network.com. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  21. Navajo AG calls for special prosecutor Archived 2010-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
  22. "Navajos vote to reduce size of Tribal Council to 24 – Indian Country News". indiancountrynews.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  23. "Speaker Pro Tem Nez encourages Navajo people, chapter governments to be patient with the 22nd Navajo Nation Council" (PDF). googleusercontent.com. Archived from the original on 13 November 2011. Retrieved 9 September 2015.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  24. Felicia Fonseca (21 October 2010). "Navajo Tribal Vice President Ben Shelly charged in slush fund investigation". DeseretNews.com. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  25. "Charges filed in probe of Navajo slush funds". azcentral.com. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  26. Charges filed in probe of Navajo Slush Funds
  27. "Council says AG, deputy must go". navajotimes.com. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  28. "Delegates dump bills to fire AG, deputy". navajotimes.com. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  29. "22nd Navajo Nation Council Selects Johnny Naize as New Speaker". Indian Country Today Media Network.com. 2011-01-25. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  30. "A year and a day in prison, restitution for tax evasion". Albuquerque Journal. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  31. "Former, current Navajo Nation Council members accused of misusing nearly $186K in discretionary funds". Farmington Daily Times. Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  32. "Current and former Navajo Nation Council speakers plead not guilty to misusing discretionary funds". Farmington Daily Times. Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  33. "22nd NAVAJO NATION COUNCIL – Office of the Speaker" (PDF). googleusercontent.com. Archived from the original on 19 April 2014. Retrieved 9 September 2015.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  34. "Marley Shebala's Notebook". dineresourcesandinfocenter.org. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  35. "Many Farms grazing official claims Naize seat". Navajo Times. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  36. "David L. Tom resigns his position as delegate on the Navajo Nation Council". Farmington Daily Times. Archived from the original on 27 December 2014. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  37. "Navajo Nation Council welcomes new delegate". The Washington Times. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  38. Arizona Capitol Times: Navajo Nation Council passes emergency language requirement repeal. October 23, 2014. Accessed February 15, 2015.
  39. "Navajo President vetoes bill, Navajo Nation election still in doubt". blogforarizona.net. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  40. "Page Not Found". Archived from the original on 2015-01-05.
  41. "Navajo president rejects language fluency bill". Navajo Post. Archived from the original on 5 January 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  42. "Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly to remain in office". Farmington Daily Times. Archived from the original on 30 July 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  43. Holgate, Jolene (January 16, 2019). "24th Navajo Nation Council takes office and elects Council Delegate Seth Damon as Speaker Pro Tem" (PDF) (Press release). 24th Navajo Nation Council: Office of the Speaker. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
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