Diné Civic Center  ·  2026 Navajo Nation Presidential Candidate

Andrew Curley

Interviewed by Cal Nez — Politics on the Navajo Nation (2026)

Candidate Snapshot

Office SoughtPresident, Navajo Nation
Home ChapterHouck Chapter, Fort Defiance Agency
LanguagesNot provided
BackgroundAssociate Professor, University of Arizona; PhD Development Sociology; former Diné Policy Institute researcher
Campaign FocusLand reform, executive branch downsizing, local governance, sustainable development

Executive Summary

Andrew Curley presents the most academic and structural reform candidacy in the 2026 presidential field. His platform argues that land reform — specifically the grazing permit system — is the foundational issue blocking Navajo housing, economic development, and community autonomy. He advocates for a smaller, more efficient Office of the President and Vice President (OPVP) and a return of governance authority to chapter level.

Curley's candidacy is built around governance from the ground up. He believes the OPVP has grown too large, too expensive, and too distant from the chapters where real governance should happen. His proposal to dramatically reduce the OPVP — from 38 directors to a leaner structure — is not simply a cost-cutting measure. It reflects a philosophical position: the presidency should function as a coordinator, not a power center.

On economic development, Curley explicitly rejects uranium mining and expanded fossil fuel extraction, arguing they produce short-term revenue while creating long-term harm to Navajo land, water, and communities. His alternative framework emphasizes sustainable development grounded in Diné values.

At a Glance

Professional Background

  • Associate Professor, University of Arizona (current)
  • PhD, Development Sociology, Cornell University
  • Former researcher, Diné Policy Institute
  • Scholar of Indigenous governance & land policy

Leadership Style

  • Evidence-based and research-driven
  • Long-range structural thinker
  • Collaborative rather than directive
  • Willing to take uncomfortable positions

Primary Areas of Focus

  • Land reform — grazing permit system
  • OPVP reduction
  • Local governance — return to chapters
  • Sustainable development
  • Housing — remove grazing barriers

Biography & Career

Andrew Curley has spent his academic career studying the political economy of Indigenous governance, with particular focus on Navajo land policy, water rights, and the colonial structures that continue to shape Navajo political life. His PhD research at Cornell examined how the grazing permit system — originally imposed by the federal government in the 1930s as part of the Livestock Reduction program — continues to function as a barrier to housing construction, economic development, and community autonomy across the Navajo Nation. His work at the Diné Policy Institute deepened his understanding of how Navajo governance functions at the chapter level. Curley has not held elected office, which he frames as evidence of independence from the political networks he argues have perpetuated the current system.

Leadership Assessment

Curley's leadership philosophy is grounded in institutional realism — a recognition that the presidency has less formal power than many candidates claim, and that governing effectively requires working within those constraints rather than pretending they don't exist. He argues that many Navajo Nation presidents have created unnecessary conflict with the Legislative branch by overreaching their authority, and that a more modest, better-defined OPVP would produce better outcomes. His approach to decision-making is explicitly research-informed, grounded in decades of academic work rather than campaign intuition.

Major Policy Priorities

Standardized Candidate Scorecard

8.7/10
Strong — interview evidence averageBased on 11 of 12 categories the interview covered
Strong (8.0–10)Moderate (6.5–7.9)Limited (below 6.5)Not assessed (not in interview)

Scores reflect evidence shown in the available interview only — not a comprehensive assessment of the candidate. Categories the interview did not cover are marked "Not assessed" and are left out of the average. How are these scores determined?

Governance Knowledge9.5/10
Deep structural analysis; land reform framework
Leadership8.5/10
Institutional realism; honest about executive limits
Composure & Character8.5/10
Candid about limitations and residency; humble about executive role boundaries; composed, analytical tone
Community Engagement8.0/10
Chapter-centered philosophy; academic community roots
Economic Development9.0/10
Land reform as economic foundation; anti-extractive
Healthcare7.5/10
No 638 specifics; IHS reform not addressed
Housing9.0/10
Grazing permit reform as primary housing barrier solution
Infrastructure8.5/10
Chapter-level infrastructure through governance devolution
Transparency & Accountability9.0/10
OPVP reduction; structural accountability framework
Long-Term Vision9.5/10
Constitutional development; generational structural reform
VeteransNot assessed
Not addressed in interview
Education8.5/10
PhD research depth; tribal college advocacy implied

Strengths

Land reform intellectual depth; policy analysis capability; OPVP restructuring framework; local governance philosophy; willingness to name politically uncomfortable structural solutions.

Areas for Further Clarification

Healthcare specific plans not developed; veterans services not addressed; implementation pathway for grazing reform not fully detailed; economic enterprise strategy limited to rejecting extractive industries without full alternative.

Notable Quotes

"Land reform is the number one issue facing the Navajo Nation."
"We need to rethink the grazing leases — that system is blocking housing, blocking economic development."
"The President should focus on day-to-day governance, not on being a celebrity leader."

What Makes This Candidate Different?

Curley is the only presidential candidate whose entire platform flows from a single, deeply researched structural diagnosis: that the grazing permit system is the root cause of the Nation's most persistent challenges. He is also the only candidate who explicitly limits what he will and will not support on economic development, including public positions against uranium and fossil fuel extraction — positions most candidates in a resource-dependent Nation would be reluctant to take.

Candidate Assessment

Andrew Curley brings intellectual depth and structural coherence distinctive in the 2026 presidential field. His diagnosis of the grazing permit system as a foundational governance challenge is well-supported by his research and appears genuinely held rather than politically convenient. His willingness to be specific about what he opposes reflects political honesty that voters may find either refreshing or limiting, depending on their priorities. The primary challenge for his candidacy is translating academic and structural analysis into an actionable governing program. Voters seeking the deepest structural understanding of Navajo governance challenges will find Curley's platform compelling. Those prioritizing demonstrated executive experience may have questions his interview did not fully address.

Interview Resources

Watch Andrew Curley’s Cal Nez interview

Others Running for President

Alexander ChambersArvin TrujilloBuu NygrenCrystalyne CurleyDebbie Nez-ManuelDonovan BegayEmily EllisonFrank Dayish Jr.John Russell Jr.Jordan BegayJustin JonesKevin L. CodyLarry NobleMyron LizerTom T. Chee
Compare all candidates for this seat →

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Primary source: Official Cal Nez interview, Politics on the Navajo Nation (2026). Production Standard: Diné Civic Center Candidate Page Publication Standard v2.0.
This candidate page was produced by the Diné Civic Center based on the candidate's public interview with Cal Nez (Politics on the Navajo Nation, 2026 election cycle). All observations are based on publicly available information and the candidate's own statements. The Diné Civic Center does not endorse, rank, or recommend any candidate for any office. This page is provided as a civic education resource for Navajo Nation voters.