Sen. Maria Cantwell joins Oklahoma congressman in pressing NFL on name change for Washington Redskins

  • By New York Times News Service and Peninsula Daily News
  • Monday, February 10, 2014 6:29pm
  • News
Above

Above

By New York Times News Service

and Peninsula Daily News

WASHINGTON — Sen. Maria Cantwell and an Oklahoma congressman are sending a strongly worded letter to the commissioner of the National Football League urging him to support changing the name of the Washington Redskins because it offends Native Americans and others, with one lawmaker saying she might reconsider the league’s tax-exempt status if it does not comply.

Cantwell, D-Wash and chairwoman of the Indian Affairs Committee, said in an interview with The New York Times on Sunday that lawmakers would “definitely” examine the NFL’s tax-exempt status and other ways to pressure the league.

“You’re getting a tax break for educational purposes, but you’re still embracing a name that people see as a slur and encouraging it,” Cantwell said.

In a copy of the letter released on Sunday, Cantwell and Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla. and a member of the Native American Caucus, chided the NFL commissioner, Roger Goodell, for his recent remark that the name of the team, based near Washington, D.C., “honored” Native Americans.

“The NFL can no longer ignore this and perpetuate the use of this name as anything but what it is: a racial slur,” they said.

Goodell has been careful to say he is attentive to the concerns of those who disapprove of the name. But at a news conference before the Super Bowl last week, he said polls showed support, including among Native Americans, for keeping it.

“Let me remind you, this is the name of a football team, a football team that has had that name for 80 years and has presented the name in a way that has honored Native Americans,” he said.

Cantwell said those comments signaled that the NFL had decided to defend the name, which organizations including the NAACP and the Anti-Defamation League oppose.

“I think they’ve been hearing from various tribal leaders, and we thought they were understanding this issue, but clearly this press conference shows that they don’t,” she said.

An NFL spokesman said the league would not comment before receiving the letter.

But a spokesman for the Redskins took issue.

“With all the important issues Congress has to deal with, such as a war in Afghanistan to deficits to health care, don’t they have more important issues to worry about than a football team’s name?” the spokesman, Tony Wyllie, wrote in an email.

“And given the fact that the name of Oklahoma means ‘red people’ in Choctaw, this request is a little ironic.”

Taking a strong tone in their letter, Cantwell and Cole, a member of the Chickasaw Nation, mentioned the NFL’s tax-exempt status, which it has as a nonprofit trade organization. (The teams are not tax-exempt.)

“The National Football League is on the wrong side of history,” they wrote. “It is not appropriate for this multibillion-dollar 501(c)(6) tax-exempt organization to perpetuate and profit from the continued degradation of tribes and Indian people.”

The letter also refers to a recent case, unrelated to the NFL, in which the Patent and Trademark Office rejected a trademark application that included the term “redskin” because, the office said, it is a “derogatory slang term.”

Cantwell said Sunday that lawmakers would consider the roles of that office, the Federal Communications Commission and other agencies in urging the team to change its name.

Ten members of Congress sent a similar letter to Goodell in May after introducing a bill that would require the director of the Patent and Trademark Office to cancel any registration that used the term “redskin” in reference to Native Americans for commercial purposes.

In October, President Obama said that while he did not think fans were trying to offend Native Americans, if he owned the team he would consider renaming it.

The team’s owner, Daniel Snyder, has said he will not change the name.

Days after Obama’s comments, Snyder wrote a letter to fans that talked about the values, traditions and pride associated with the name the team has borne since 1933.

“I’ve listened carefully to the commentary and perspectives on all sides, and I respect the feelings of those who are offended by the team name,” he said.

“But I hope such individuals also try to respect what the name means, not only for all of us in the extended Washington Redskins family, but among Native Americans, too.”

Port Townsend Redskins

On the North Olympic Peninsula, the Port Townsend School Board voted unanimously June 24, 2013, to drop Redskins as the high school’s team name, logo and mascot after nearly 90 years — despite strong opposition from some community members — and conduct a “student- and community-based process to replace it.”

Additionally, the board voted to adopt a curriculum that teaches the history of Native Americans and is meant to promote racial sensitivity.

This followed a yearlong process involving a committee that examined community response to the mascot and issued findings that the mascot had a negative effect on the district.

School Superintendent David Engle said a committee made up of volunteers in three areas — the staff, the community and the students — will make recommendations to the school board for a new mascot for the school’s athletes.

Port Townsend teams are playing as the Redskins this school year, and the coaches have been instructed that it is time “to say goodbye to the mascot,” Engle said.

The school’s colors — red and white with black highlights — will not change, Engle added.

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