Kansas lawmakers hear proposal to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day; sponsor says it’s unlikely to get a vote

photo by: Associated Press

A person walks across the Statehouse grounds in Topeka, Kan., Friday, Jan. 15, 2021. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)

TOPEKA — Members of a Kansas House panel have heard testimony from Democratic lawmakers pushing for Kansas to join a handful of states observing a day honoring Native Americans instead of Christopher Columbus, but a chief proponent said he doubted that the bill would get a vote.

The House Federal and State Affairs Committee on Tuesday listened to remarks from three lawmakers who said Kansas needed to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day to acknowledge how the understanding of Columbus’ legacy has changed over the years.

Native American advocates have pressed states to change to Indigenous Peoples Day over concerns that Columbus helped launched centuries of genocide against indigenous populations in the Americas.

But Democratic Rep. Boog Highberger, of Lawrence, a lead bill sponsor, said he wouldn’t be surprised if the panel’s Republican chairman failed to hold a vote on the bill.

Highberger said he had proposed the legislation at least three times. The bill got its first committee hearing in 2019, but Chair John Barker, an Abilene Republican, didn’t bring it to a vote.

After the meeting on Tuesday, Barker told reporters he didn’t know whether he would hold a committee vote on the bill this year. Without one, the bill would stall.

“It’s a matter of selecting things that are priorities,” Barker said.


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