Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Housing Secretary Julián Castro are among the 2020 Democratic contenders slated to attend the first-ever presidential forum on Native American issues, an event celebrated as an opportunity to highlight oft-ignored crises affecting indigenous communities.
“The people they are going to be talking to are going to be representing Natives in the seven battleground states where a few thousand votes or few hundred votes are going to be the factor,” O.J. Semans, co-executive director of the Native American voting rights group Four Directions, which is hosting the event, told Think Progress.
“We’ve made great strides in the past 19 years to get to this point.”
—O.J. Semans, Four Directions
“We’ve made great strides in the past 19 years to get to this point,” added Semans.
The other 2020 presidential candidates who have confirmed they will attend the forum in Sioux City, Iowa—scheduled for August 19 and 20—are Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, author Marianne Williamson, and former Rep. John Delaney (D-Md.).
According to Think Progress, the candidates are likely to discuss healthcare, poverty, voting rights, land protection, the environment, and other issues facing indigenous communities, which have been at the front of ongoing battles against climate-destroying pipelines.
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