US Senate candidate Franken to attend Powwow
Friday night
Seeks Red Lake
support
By Michael Meuers
Red Lake Public Relations
DFL endorsed
United States Senate Candidate Al Franken will be coming to Red Lake on Friday
August 15th for the Red Lake Fair and Powwow. According to Red Lake
Chairman Floyd Jourdain, Jr., Franken will arrive at
the powwow grounds in Red Lake at about 7 PM for the Grand Entry, and will have
an opportunity to address the crowd following. Franken will stay at the
powwow for approximately two hours hoping to meet and visit with as many tribal
members as possible.
Franken visited Red
Lake at the Council
Chambers in late January 2008 prior to winning the DFL endorsement in June.
He was educated and quizzed by Tribal Officers.
Asked what he would do for Minnesota tribes, Franken answered “I hope to bring
an understanding, and then fight the fight you’ve fought and continue to fight
to understand your experience”, said Franken, “and to understand the gifts you
bring...a love of the land and spirit...you have a lot to teach us” he said.
“I want to know that but also to get things done, honor the treaties,
work in creative ways, work on economic development in concert with your
values.”
Regarding a question on sovereignty, Franken said; "Sitting with you is no
different than meeting with the prime minister of Canada. I understand
that." “I will always wear a tie in respect, you make the best
decisions for your people, we caused this cultural trauma,” said Franken, “I
think I get it, and every time I get it more, and then I get it even more.”
Franken conceded that the Federal government has been remiss in it’s treatment of America’s First Nations.
"There's an original sin, and a debt from the original sin, and we
owe it”, said Franken. “Let's just get that straight. Then we can
live up to the obligations that are there and find practical ways to address
it. And have patience, but not too much patience," Franken
concluded.
Chairman Jourdain pointed how there is a lack of
respect for Indian Nations when at the Capitol by some legislators, though
not all - and I want to emphasize that - but often it happens with us and other
Tribes as well to be rushed, with cramped conversations in hallways with
legislators in Washington who didn’t have time for a real meeting.
"I've been subject to rushed conversations too, but I'm not the
leader of a sovereign nation", said Franken. "If I've had a
busy day in Washington,
or there were votes that kept me from meeting with you, then we will meet that
night. You'll come over to my house for dinner."
Franken was endorsed by the Minnesota State DFL at their convention held in Rochester this past June.
Chairman Jourdain attended the convention as a
Super Delegate, as are all Tribal Chairs of Indian Nations headquartered in the
State of Minnesota.
Franken will need to leave Red Lake at about 9 PM to catch a flight out of Bemidji.
A SHORT BIOGRAPHY OF DFL SENATE CANDIDATE AL FRANKEN
You might know Al Franken as an award-winning
satirist and author. You might know him as the host of Air America Radio's
"The Al Franken Show," the network's flagship program that helped put
progressive talk radio on the map.
Born in New York on May 21, 1951, Al moved
with his family to Albert Lea,
Minnesota at the age of four.
When Al’s Dad, Joe Franken's quilting factory went under, the family moved to
the Twin Cities. Al, his parents, and his brother Owen lived in a
two-bedroom, one-bath house in St.
Louis Park.
Al’s dad ended up getting a job as a printing salesman while his mom worked as
a real estate agent. Al’s good grades got him into Harvard, but his
friendship with fellow Minnesotan Tom Davis (Tom grew up in Richfield) and
their performances in school and at Dudley Riggs's Brave New Workshop in
Minneapolis led him to try his hand at comedy after graduating.
Al and Tom Davis soon caught on with a show called "Saturday Night”.
Over the next two decades, Al would be awarded five Emmy awards and seven
nominations for his work on the show, which you might know as "Saturday
Night Live." Al also wrote for the big screen, where his screenplays
included "When A Man Loves A Woman," a
serious take on the family disease of addiction.
At a mixer his freshman year, Al met Franni Bryson, a
freshman at Simmons. They've been married for over 31 years and have two
kids. Thomasin, 26, graduated from Harvard and became
a teacher, working in a public elementary school in the Bronx.
Joe (named after Al's dad), 22, just graduated from Princeton
with a degree in Mechanical Engineering.
When Al left "Saturday Night Live" in 1995, Newt Gingrich's
Republican Congress had just taken power. Although Al had refrained from
injecting his own politics into his work as a comedian, watching Rush Limbaugh,
take aim at Al's core values was too much for him to let stand. So, he
used his wit as a weapon, penning "Rush Limbaugh Is A
Big Fat Idiot (and other observations)." The book rocketed to #1 on the
New York Times best-seller list. In 2003 he wrote his next best-seller,
"Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the
Right." In 2005, he followed with another best-seller, "The Truth
(with jokes)."
In 2004, a brand new part of the progressive movement celebrated its first day
on the air. Air America Radio was the first progressive talk radio network, and
Al was its first star. Broadcasting live, three hours a day, five days a week,
the show featured experts in domestic and foreign policy, national and world
leaders, and issues ranging from the cost of prescription drugs to the war in Iraq.
Al has visited our troops overseas with the USO seven times. He's been to Iraq four
times. In 2005, Al wrote about his trip in a photo essay on the Midwest
Values PAC website.
When Al and Franni found themselves empty-nesters,
they decided to move back to Minnesota.
Al founded a political action committee, Midwest Values PAC, which raised over $1.1 million for Democrats across Minnesota and around the
country.