Federal government changes rules to recognize Native Hawaiian government
The Department of the Interior (DOI), a Cabinet-level federal agency, has finalized a change to its rules that would require the federal government to recognize a Native Hawaiian government, should one be created, and reestablish a “formal government-to-government” relationship. “Today is a major step forward in the reconciliation process between Native Hawaiians and the United States that began over 20 years ago,” Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell said in a statement. “We are proud to announce this final rule that respects and supports self-governance for Native Hawaiians, one of our nation’s largest indigenous communities.”
Reaction from Native Hawaiians, who do not have many of the same rights to self-determination Native Americans and Alaskans do, has been mixed. Robert Lindsey, the chair of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, an autonomous state agency that advocates for Native Hawaiians and oversees some state land for them, released a statement applauding the new rules. “Native Hawaiians have been the only major indigenous group in the 50 states without a process for establishing a government-to-government relationship with the federal government. This rule finally remedies this injustice,” Lindsey said. “Having a federal rule available to Native Hawaiians is… an important step towards achieving Native Hawaiian self-determination and self-governance.”