REGION SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A3 ‘Compromise is never an option’ Republican candidates for next governor promise Pendleton crowd victory and conservative reform in Salem By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — There wasn’t much daylight between the eight candi- dates on stage at a Tuesday, March 24, Umatilla County Republican Party guber- natorial forum at the Pend- leton Convention Center. The candidates generally agreed they were going to reverse the policies of Dem- ocratic Gov. Kate Brown, the state should move to a school choice model, the Second Amendment needed to be protected and all gov- ernment mandates needed to be repealed. The candidates didn’t get much time to expound on their thoughts. The size of the fi eld — West Linn political consultant Bridget Barton, Hillsboro retiree Reed Christensen, Tigard entrepreneur Nick Hess, Baker City Mayor Kerry McQuisten, Bend mar- keting consultant Brandon Merritt, White City mas- sage therapist Amber Rich- ardson, Redmond con- tractor Bill Sizemore and former Alsea School Dis- trict Superintendent Marc Thielman — had only 30 seconds each to answer most questions. But all candidates still got a shot at making their case to a good-sized audi- ence in Pendleton. The candidates were mostly polite with one another but occasionally took shots at some of the candidates who weren’t in Pendleton, which included many of the fi eld’s top fundraisers — former state House Minority Leader Christine Drazan, of Canby, Salem oncologist and 2016 Repub- lican nominee Bud Pierce, Sandy Mayor Stan Pulliam and former state representa- tive and Oregon Republican Party Chair Bob Tiernan, of Lake Oswego. Oregon hasn’t elected a Republican governor since 1982, but each candidate explained how they would be the one to reverse the trend. Barton stressed to the audience both her experi- ence advocating for rural Oregon and her status as an “outsider.” She told the audience that she would work hard in Salem to advance their priorities. “I’m here to tell you that I would stand in front of a train for you,” she said. As governor, Barton said she would immediately replace the state’s deputy superintendent of public instruction, who leads the Oregon Department of Education. Christensen said the most important issue was to end Oregon’s vote-by- mail system in favor of a one-day, in-person election so the state could get “elec- tion integrity.” He also highlighted his participation in the attempted insurrection in Washington, D.C., in 2021. Christensen faces federal charges for assaulting Cap- itol police. “I was arrested by the FBI,” he said. “I’m cur- rently in the system. I care.” In almost all of his Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Oregon Republican gubernatorial candidate Nick Hess and and seven other contenders express their views during a forum Thursday, March 24, 2022, at the Pendleton Convention Center. answers, Hess said he would work to make Oregon gov- ernment more transparent and listen to residents instead of lobbyists. Like former Gov. Vic Atiyeh, Hess said he was a Republican from the Port- land metro area, which would give him an advan- tage in trying to break the GOP’s losing streak in gubernatorial elections. “I know it sucks to think about a Portland person, but a Portland person is how we get somebody who’s conser- vative elected,” he said. McQuisten used her opening remarks to remind the audience she helped pass a Baker City resolution that criticized Brown and her COVID-19 restrictions. “I wrote a resolution you may have heard of that told Kate Brown to pound sand,” she said. McQuisten said mod- erates such as Pierce and Knute Buehler couldn’t win the general election, but she, as a “staunch conserva- tive,” could. Nonaffi liated voters recently surpassed Demo- crats as the largest group of voters in the state, and Merritt said Republi- cans needed to win those voters if they were going to win general elections and govern eff ectively. He also criticized Drazan for allowing a gun control bill to pass so Republicans could get a seat at the table for redistricting only for Democrats to ger- rymander anyway. “Compromise is never an option,” he said. Richardson said she was intentionally running her campaign frugally, adding she had only spent $3,000 on her campaign. She also compared her- self to former President Donald Trump, saying she was unpredictable and was able to successfully evade the state’s attempts to censor her. “The state doesn’t know what I’m going to do next,” she said. ”Every time I try to do something, they never know what to expect.” Sizemore owns a painting business, but he might be best known for passing multiple ballot measures that lim- ited property taxes in the 1990s. He also ran for gov- ernor in 1996, but lost to Gov. John Kitzhaber in a landslide. Sizemore leaned on his experience passing ballot measures and fi ghting with public employee unions, skills he thought would help him reform Salem. Thielman touted his time as a “man of action” in Alsea, where he and the school board passed a res- olution making face masks optional before the state lifted its own mandate. He said the state should require schools to teach gun safety courses in fi fth, eighth and 10th grade. As governor, he also would have the state arrest Mult- nomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt. CTUIR sees parallels between their own history and Ukraine Tribes characterize Russian invasion as ‘ongoing genocide’ By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian MISSION — In 1856, B. F. Shaw, a colonel with the Washington Territory Volunteer Infantry, led his soldiers into the Grande Ronde Valley and murdered dozens of Cayuse who lived in a village near present-day Summerville. In 2022, Russian Presi- dent Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine, leading to the death of more than 900 civilians, as of Sunday, March 20, according to NPR. Centuries and conti- nents separate these two events, but for the leaders of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- ervation, the parallels are apparent. On March 14, the CTUIR announced its board of Anna King/Northwest Public Broadcasting, File Bobbie Conner, director of the Tamástslikt Cultural Institute near Pendleton, in a statement drew comparisons between tribal history and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. trustees approved a $5,000 donation to Doctors Without Borders to aid in the bur- geoning humanitarian crisis unfolding in Ukraine. But the announcement also included more pointed lan- guage condemning Putin and Russia for the invasion and the “ongoing genocide of the Ukrainian people” before drawing comparisons between the current war and its own history. “Today, millions of Ukrainians are (being) forc- ibly removed, killed, or are fl eeing their homelands. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla, Walla Walla, and Cayuse experienced sim- ilar assaults on our people, our land and our sover- eign rights in the 1850s,” the press release states. Our homelands were invaded and many of our people killed during that time. The CTUIR ultimately ceded 6.4 million acres of our lands and resources to the United States in the Treaty of 1855, and some of these lands were illegally entered by non-Indian settlers prior to the ratifi cation of the Treaty by the United States Con- gress in 1859.” In an interview, Bobbie Conner, a tribal histo- rian and the director of the Tamástslikt Cultural Insti- tute, said the treaty was supposed to protect the tribes from encroachment and violence from settlers, but that’s not what hap- pened in 1856. That year, Shaw attacked the encampment killing approximately 60 people — men, women, children and elders — in the pro- cess. The infantry then proceeded to destroy their homes and confi scate their horses. While contempo- rary accounts described it as a battle and lionized Shaw and his army, Conner said “massacre” was the more appropriate term. “These unprovoked attacks on peaceful, coex- isting people are exactly in my mind a parallel of what is happening now,” she said. “Only the armaments and the methods and the whole- sale slaughter or annihila- tion of people is much more exponentially damaging.” Conner further explained how violence from Western settlers and the U.S. gov- ernment infl icted against American Indians are often mislabeled “cultural con- fl icts,” but were more about power and land. “Rarely did anybody who pointed a gun at us and gave us an ultimatum or fi red at us before giving an ultimatum have any comprehension of our cul- ture,” she said. “You would have to know something to have a confl ict with our culture. It is, historically, extremely likely that they knew nothing of our culture, but deemed that their supe- riority not only in power, but with divine intervention and military force, that they had the right to do what they did. It’s a question that applies today. What right does Putin have to con- duct his actions? Justifi ca- tions matter not because it is genocidal.” Conner said she thinks Americans understand the stakes of Ukraine’s sover- eignty. She recalled how she recently spoke with another tribal employee who could trace her lineage to Kherson, the Ukrainian region that was recently claimed by the Russians. She hopes the lesson people take away from Ukraine and the history of the CTUIR is a better understanding of the human condition. “There’s an artifi cial construct, that many of us are of a diff erent race,” she said. ”There is only one race: the human race. I do not have the right to do to my neighbor what is hap- pening there. Nor do my neighbors have the right to do it to me.” More than $1.5 million in federal funds headed to Oregon East Oregonian WASHINGTON — Oregon’s U.S. Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden on Tuesday, March 22, announced more than $1.5 million in Federal Emer- gency Management Agency funds is headed to Oregon to help fund the Confeder- ated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation acquisi- tion of fi ve properties in the fl oodplain. “I saw fi rsthand how the fl ood in February 2020 was devastating to the Confed- erated Tribes of the Uma- tilla Indian Reservation and other residents in Umatilla County,” Merkley said in a press release. “I am pleased that CTUIR will now have the funding needed to safely remove structures that were damaged beyond repair by the raging fl oodwaters. This cleanup is an important step in the tribe’s remark- able eff orts to restore fl ood- plains and protect water quality. I look forward to continuing to work with Oregon’s sovereign tribal nations to ensure they have the resources their commu- nities need to thrive.” “The impact of the February 2020 fl oods in Eastern Oregon was pain- fully clear in the faces of the community I met with at the Red Cross shelter and the emergency opera- tions center,” Wyden said in the release. “The destruc- tion landed especially hard on the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- ervation. And I’m glad to have teamed up with tribal offi cials to secure these fed- eral emergency funds for this cleanup and property acquisitions that are essen- tial steps in the road to eco- nomic recovery.” The grant comes to a total of $1,524,951.53 to help fund the acquisition of every structure on fi ve properties in the fl oodplain as well as the required assessments, studies and environmental historic preservation review nec- essary to demolish and/or restore the properties in the fl oodplain. “This will help Umatilla Indian Reservation residents recover from the February 2020 fl ood of the Umatilla River that was so devas- tating to so many homes and so much property,” said Kat Brigham, chair of the Board Union County Business Grants Available The 2022 Union County Business Assistance Grant Program is currently accepting applications from small businesses financially affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Eligible applicants may receive up to $10,000. Applications, eligibility requirements, and additional information is available on the Union County website at www.union-county.org or by calling 541-963- 1001. Completed and signed applications packets must be received via email at bizgrant@union-county.org or hand delivered to 1106 K Avenue by 12:00 noon on Friday, April 1, 2022. This grant program is being made available due to federal funding received from the Coronavirus State Fiscal Recovery Fund. of Trustees of the Confeder- ated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. We are extremely grateful to Sen- ator Merkley and Senator Wyden for their support.” Mobile Mobile Service Service Outstanding Computer Repair Fast & & Reliable Reliable Fast Open for all 24/7 your Call or Text Call or Text 24/7 Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Stay up-to-date Microsoft’ If your with computer is s most advanced operating system to date, in despair call Outstanding Windows 11 Computer Repair! Desktops and laptops in stock www.outstandingcomputerrepair.com Or upgrade yours today for the best security! Refurbished Desktop & Laptops For Sale House calls (let me come to you!) Drop Offs & Remote Services are Available All credit cards accepted