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Wind River Reservation backed Obama for president
Monday, November 10, 2008
Filed Under: Politics

Voters on the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming voted overwhelmingly for president-election Barack Obama even as the rest of the state went for John McCain.

Obama won 76 percent of the vote in the Fort Washakie precinct, 66 percent in the Arapahoe precinct and 79 percent in the Ethete precinct. That's nearly the opposite of the margins McCain received elsewhere in the state.

"What just happened here is an indicator that for too long, Native people have not had an acceptable and working relationship, one that acknowledged treaties, with our governments," Sergio Maldonado Sr. of Central Wyoming College told the Associated Press. "With President Obama, we have reason to believe this cultural change that is inclusive of acceptance ... will happen," he added.

The reservation is home to the Eastern Shoshone Tribe and the Northern Arapaho Tribe. Native Americans make up 2.6 percent of the state population.

Get the Story:
Tribal precincts backed Obama (The Billings Gazette 11/9)

Relevant Documents:
NCAI Post-Election Analysis (November 2008)

Related Stories:
Jodi Rave: NCAI excited about Obama transition (11/10)
No mention of tribes on Obama transition website (11/7)
Ernie Stevens: Optimism and change in Washington (11/7)
Navajo voters excited about election of Obama (11/7)
Editorial: A shining moment in American history (11/7)
Indian vote shows mixed results in key states (11/6)
Oklahoma tribes hopeful after Obama victory (11/6)
Navajo voters hail election of Obama as historic (11/6)
Young Indian voter counts on Obama for change (11/6)
Sen. Obama launches White House transition team (11/6)
Sen. Obama wins historic presidential election (11/5)



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