>>Hoskin Jr. pointed the blame at Gov. Kevin Stitt for refusing to renew hunting and fishing compacts with his nation and the Choctaw Nation in 2021, as did Muscogee Nation Principal Chief David Hill.<<

https://www.kosu.org/news/2025-10-09/do-tribal-citizens-need-state-issued-hunting-fishing-licenses-off-trust-lands-oklahoma-officials-say-yes
#Indigenous #Hunting #Fishing #TrustLands #Oklahoma #KOSU #KevinStitt #Cherokee #Choctaw #Muscogee #ChuckHoskinJr #Chickasaw #Seminole #McGirt #WildlifeManagement

Do tribal citizens need state-issued hunting, fishing licenses off trust lands? Oklahoma officials say yes

Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation shared a press release on Wednesday, drawing disapproval from several tribal leaders of the five largest tribes in Oklahoma and tribal lawyers. It highlighted a gray area of where tribal citizens can hunt and fish with tribally issued licenses.

KOSU
“On the far end of the Trail of Tears there was a promise.” Five years ago today the Supreme Court upheld the reservation of Muscogee Nation and Oklahoma denied its existence for over a century. #McGirt #LandBack
By the Fire We Carry w/ Rebecca Nagle

Cherokee journalist Rebecca Nagle  joins the show to talk about By the Fire We Carry: The Generations-Long Fight for Justice on Native Land (2024). The book is a centuries-long history and legal thriller, documenting the lead-up to the landmark McGirt Supreme Court decision.   Indigenous Peoples’ Day 2024 marks the 5th anniversary of The Red Nation Podcast. Our podcast is a collaboration between The Red Nation and Red Media and is produced by Red Media. Red Media exists to fill the need for Indigenous media by and for Indigenous Peoples’. On Indigenous Peoples’ Day, Red Media launched its GoFundMe to gain support for operational costs, please consider empowering Red Media’s work. You can also continue to support Red Media on Patreon, where you will gain access to bonus episodes of The Red Nation Podcast and other benefits. Your support empowers Indigenous media and our podcasts, thank you!  GoFundMe:   Patreon:  Subscribe to The Red Nation Newsletter:  

INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF THE
FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES
CHEROKEE - CHICKASAW - CHOCTAW - CREEK - SEMINOLE

Leaders of the Five Tribes issue statement to Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt declining participation in the One Oklahoma Task Force

Leaders of The Inter-Tribal Council of the Five Civilized Tribes on Jan. 9
submitted a formal notice to Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt officially opposing the governor's task force on McGirt as outlined recently in his Executive Order 2023-32. The Five Tribes cannot participate in an effort that spreads falsehoods about the law, attempts to minimize tribal voices, and engages in political attacks instead of constructive government-to-government dialogue.

The Five Tribes - governments of the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee (Creek) and Seminole Nations - have long been dedicated to advancing public safety for tribal citizens and all fellow Oklahomans. The tribes welcome opportunities to collaborate with state, federal, local and tribal governments toward this goal and have a long track record of doing so, both before and after the McGirt v Oklahoma decision. Our notice to Gov. Stitt clarifies once again that McGirt v Oklahoma was, at its core, a pro-public-safety ruling that restored tribal jurisdiction the state had illegally usurped for well over a century. Despite the Governor's Executive Order language which suggested the decision caused uncertainty, the McGirt decision finally restored legitimate legal jurisdiction under clear federal laws and the U.S. Constitution. Tribal nations have been empowered to enforce the law and deliver justice for victims.

When we have a willing partner at the State of Oklahoma, we are fully prepared to move forward, and we are eager to work with our friends and neighbors to improve coordination in public safety efforts.
#McGirt #Native #Indigenous #FiveTribes #IndianTerritory #Oklahoma
Akkoma

@Yehuda
4/
Stitt has consistently railed against the McGirt decision, which greatly expanded tribal jurisdiction in Oklahoma, particularly in eastern Oklahoma. Friday’s executive order says McGirt created a “broken system” and “continues to wreak havoc” with a “lack of jurisdictional clarity, which to date has crippled the state’s ability to resolve issues and continues to negatively impact crime victims, state and tribal law enforcement officials, and all Oklahomans.”

Others contend that the problems could be resolved if Stitt and other officials would accept the ruling and work toward agreement on how to proceed.

In that vein, Cherokee Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. responded to the executive order with both encouragement and criticism.

The “Cherokee Nation, in general, welcomes Gov. Stitt to join those of us who have continued to be engaged in collaborative problem solving since the U.S. Supreme Court issued the McGirt decision,” Hoskin said in a written statement. “Cherokee Nation has, since McGirt, maintained our 90 cross deputization agreements, negotiated 30 new ticket revenue sharing agreements, and provided grants of more than $13 million to our law enforcement and public safety partners. If the Governor is genuinely interested in following our lead, that would be a welcomed development.”

But Hoskin said he found Stitt’s language “troubling” and said it “suggests he is more interested in peddling a false narrative than seriously working together in the interest of public safety.”

https://tulsaworld.com/news/state-regional/government-politics/gov-stitt-announces-mcgirt-task-force/article_e90f0768-a110-11ee-9eb3-f3978bc998d0.html

#McGirt #Lighthorse #Cherokee #Mvskoke #Native #Indigenous
Gov. Stitt announces McGirt task force

Of the 13 task force members, 11 are to be appointed by state and local officials and agencies and two are to represent Oklahoma's 38 federally recognized tribes.

Tulsa World
@Yehuda
3/
Muscogee Nation Principal Chief David Hill

My statement in response to the Executive Order by Governor Stitt calling for a task force to examine the “impact” of tribal jurisdiction.

We welcome the opportunity to work collaboratively with Governor Stitt. In fact, we’ve been asking for that for over three years. Given the failure of the Governors first taskforce, we’d like to offer some suggestions to make this one serious and substantial:

· Focus on promoting cooperation, not enflaming division.

· Engage tribes honestly. There are 39 unique tribes in Oklahoma, not just two. Eleven state agencies will be represented to speak for themselves. Tribes should be afforded the same opportunity.

· Focus on requiring state and local agencies to follow the law.

We believe that if he does these simple things, he will find that there is no crisis of law or “patchwork” gaps to solve--only a crisis of political will being fueled by the Governor’s own political campaign to have fewer police, fewer courts and fewer prosecutions by overturning tribal jurisdiction.

I remain steadfast and as resolved as ever to stand up against any threat to tribal sovereignty!

#McGirt #Lighthorse #Mvskoke #Native #Indigenous
Akkoma

#Oklahoma will be racking up quite the legal bill when they’re forced to defend this in federal court, who is most likely going to lean on #McGirt, and rule against the state.

https://www.newson6.com/story/654d551833001d0940d5d3a6/tribal-citizen-issued-ticket-over-tribal-tag-after-major-change-to-oklahoma-law

Tribal Citizen Issued Ticket Over Tribal Tag After Uncommon Example Of Enforcement

A member of the Otoe-Missouria Tribe was given a $249 ticket by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol for driving a car with a tribal tag without living in that tribe's jurisdiction. The tribe said they were not consulted about this alleged enforcement.

For over a year, kickass #NDN journalist Rebecca Nagle has been asking Oklahoma for public records to back up its claims about #McGirt. She just filed suit challenging it's failure to comply https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/politics/government/2022/11/23/oklahoma-journalist-sues-governor-kevin-stitt-over-records/69666504007/
Journalist sues Oklahoma governor, attorney general over records request delays

An Oklahoma-based journalist is suing the state’s governor and attorney general over delays to multiple open records requests.

The Oklahoman
A National American Indian Heritage Month guest speaker spoke today about her experiences growing up on tribal land in #Oklahoma, serving as an officer in the U.S. #Army, the significance of the #SCOTUS #McGirt ruling, and bringing a #Cherokee delegate to Congress. #history #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth

RT @rebeccanagle: But based on #Oklahoma’s exaggerated &amp; demonstrably false claims about the impact of #McGirt.

Our reporting found OK’s claims in #Castro were incorrect &amp; likely fabricated. But it didn’t matter.

https://t.co/r8j9QlMJuq

The Numbers Are All Wrong in Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta

The state seems to be exaggerating the upheaval caused by the <em>McGirt</em> decision two years ago.

The Atlantic