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Message from Principal Chief Chad Smith

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Principal Chief Smith Re-Elected To 2nd Term!

Dear Fellow Cherokee:

Thank you for re-electing me and the honor of serving you as Principal Chief for four more years. Your votes represent a groundswell of support for a platform of ideas. This victory happened because the Cherokee people held us to the promises we made and we delivered on those promises.

Working together we have increased funding for health care and scholarships. We have received national awards for accounting excellence. We have issued car tags as a sign of sovereignty. By voting for the Smith/Grayson ticket, the Cherokee people have told us to continue the calm, accountable government of the past four years.

There is still one very important step we need to make to achieve that goal. On July 26, my running mate,Joe Grayson, Jr., will be running against Joe Byrd’s running mate Gary Chapman in a run-off election for Deputy Chief. Joe Grayson is the man who can support the effort we have already started. Joe Grayson is a decorated veteran who knows the importance of team work. Joe Grayson has been a successful tradesman and small business owner. Joe Grayson represents peace, pride and progress. Electing any other candidate would encourage divisiveness within our executive branch.

I encourage everyone to vote for Joe Grayson on July 26. By working together, we can make the Cherokee Nation a better place for all Cherokee people. We can achieve and maintain an enriching cultural identity, economic self-reliance and a strong government.

Wa-do,
Principal Chief Chad Smith

Principal Chief Smith's Vision Statement

My vision for the future of the Cherokee Nation is that we will achieve and maintain an enriching cultural identity, economic self-reliance and a strong government.

The vision begins with sight of the past. One hundred years ago, the Cherokee Nation had a sophisticated government with a Supreme Court Building, National Capitol, penitentiary, nine courthouses, an outstanding educational system with two higher education institutions, one hundred fifty day schools and 90% literacy in Cherokee language. U.S. Senator Dawes said in 1883:

"The head chief told us that there was not a family in that whole nation that had not a home of its own. There was not a pauper in that nation, and the nation did not owe a dollar. It built its own capitol, in which we had this examination, and built its schools and its hospitals."

How could a society improve on a system where there was no poverty, every family had a home and the government had no debt? It is part of my vision for the next one hundred years to achieve what we had one hundred years ago: no poverty, every family having a home and the Cherokee Nation having no debt.

Redbird Smith, a highly respected leader, one hundred years ago stated:

"A kindly man cannot help his neighbor in need unless he have a surplus and he cannot have a surplus unless he works. Our pride in our ancestral heritage is our great incentive for handing something worthwhile to our posterity. It is this pride in ancestry that makes men strong and loyal for their principle in life. It is this same pride that makes men give up their all for their Government."

In many ways, we want to repeat the success of our past and use our cultural values to guide us in the future.

• The Cherokee people shall enjoy and exercise an enriching cultural identity, which includes a thriving command of our language, cultural history, art, traditions and wisdom.

• Cherokees and their government become economically self-reliant and sufficient to the extent the Cherokee Nation is not required to accept federal funds to meet the needs of its people and every Cherokee has the opportunity to pursue the career of his or her choice.

• The government of the Cherokee Nation maintains itself as a strong sovereign government that protects the Cherokee people.

"We are too great a nation to limit ourselves to small dreams."

"Working together let us continue to build on the foundation of accomplishments established the last three years."

Election May 24, 2003

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