Native American groups slam Trump call to bring back Washington’s NFL team name

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A view of the Robert F. Kennedy Stadium, defunct and currently under demolition, in Washington, DC, on April 28. The Washington Commanders NFL team and the city announced an agreement to build a new stadium at the site where the team formerly played from 1961 to 1996. The team currently play at Northwest Stadium in Landover, Maryland.

Some Native American groups slammed Mr Donald Trump for pushing for a return to what they called harmful names.

PHOTO: AFP

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WASHINGTON - Two Native American groups on July 21 condemned US President Donald Trump’s threat to block a new football stadium in Washington, unless the local National Football League (NFL) team

restores its old and controversial Redskins name

.

In posts on his Truth Social platform on July 20, Mr Trump said there was “a big clamoring” for the team, which has been called the Commanders since 2022, to revert to its former name and that “​our great Indian people” want it to happen.

Mr Trump also urged Major League Baseball’s Cleveland Guardians, who changed their name from Indians in 2021, to follow suit.

But some Native American groups slammed Mr Trump for pushing for a return to what they called harmful names.

“These mascots and names do not honour Native Peoples – they reduce us to caricatures,” the Association on American Indian Affairs said in a statement.

“Our diverse peoples and cultures are not relics of the past or mascots for entertainment. Native Nations are sovereign, contemporary cultures who deserve respect and self-determination, not misrepresentation.”

After decades of criticism that the name was a racial slur, the Washington NFL team in July 2020 retired the Redskins name and logo – featuring the profile of a red-faced Native American with feathers in his hair – that had been in place since 1933.

The National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) said it opposes any effort to revive what it called racist mascots that demean indigenous communities, calling it “an affront to Tribal sovereignty”.

“For seventy-five years, NCAI has held an unbroken voice: Imagery and fan behaviors that mock, demean and dehumanise Native people have no place in modern society,” NCAI President Mark Macarro said in a statement.

Because Congress retains oversight of Washington under its home-rule law, Mr Trump could try to influence federal funding or approvals tied to the stadium, but he lacks direct authority to block it.

Congress, controlled by Mr Trump’s Republicans, also has the power to override decisions by the Democratic-dominated Washington City Council, though it rarely exercises this authority.

The team, which has been in suburban Landover, Maryland, since 1997, reached an agreement with the District of Columbia government in April to return to the city with a new stadium expected to open in 2030.

The White House did not respond to a request for further comment on Mr Trump’s post. The Commanders and NFL also did not respond to requests for comment.

While some groups oppose the Commanders returning to the former name, the Native American Guardians Association said it supported Mr Trump’s desire to bring back the Redskins name.

“The Native American Guardians Association stands with the President of the United States in the call to return common sense and sanity back to our nation,” the group said in a statement.

“Virtually all Americans, to include American Indians, are fed up with cancel culture.”

The Commanders have won three Super Bowls and are one of the NFL’s marquee franchises, ranked by Forbes in 2024 as the league’s 10th most valuable franchise at US$6.3 billion ($8.1 billion).

Many American professional and collegiate sports teams have Native American-themed names. Major League Baseball’s Atlanta Braves, the National Hockey League’s Chicago Blackhawks and NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs have said they have no plans to change their names. REUTERS

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