Charlie Smith Jr.  ·  Interview Q&A

Interview Questions & Answers

Charlie Smith Jr.
Draft — summaries in our own words, pending editor sign-off.

Charlie Smith Jr. is a U.S. military veteran and former police officer from a well-known Navajo broadcasting family, running for the Cameron–Gray Mountain–Bird Springs Navajo Nation Council seat. His interview with Cal Nez ranged across veterans, the Window Rock conflict, and his signature issue, business development. Below are the main topics from the interview — the key question Cal asked on each, short summaries of Smith's answers in our own words, and follow-ups a voter might still want answered.

Watch or read the full interview, and see the scorecard, on Charlie Smith Jr.’s profile. This page is a nonpartisan summary; the Diné Civic Center does not endorse any candidate.

Background

Cal askedWho are you and where are you from?

Smith is a U.S. military veteran and former police officer from a well-known Navajo broadcasting family, running for the Cameron–Gray Mountain–Bird Springs seat. He raises cattle and says he lived through the 1989 riots, which shaped his view of allegiance and the rule of law.

Follow-up questions worth asking

Roads & Local Priorities

Cal askedWhat are the main issues you'd tackle?

Among the long-standing issues he wrote down, Smith puts area road conditions first.

Follow-up questions worth asking

Veterans

Cal askedWhose responsibility are veterans, and what would you do?

Smith calls veterans a dual responsibility of the federal government and the Nation; PTSD is real — his son returned from Desert Storm with it. He'd encourage homecoming ceremonies and faith-based or traditional counseling, direct veterans to services, and explore waiving home-site-lease hurdles to get them homes.

Follow-up questions worth asking

Title II & the Window Rock Conflict

Cal askedHow would you address the president-council gridlock?

Smith knows Title II (the post-1989 checks and balances) and says it doesn't clearly define the powers of president, vice president, speaker, and delegates; the branches aren't equally balanced, and this year's council “demand” that the absent president appear was a demand, not democracy. He says delegates hold the ultimate checks and balances, it comes down to courage and integrity, and he'd support relinquishing some presidential power to make the branches truly equal.

Follow-up questions worth asking

Business Development (His Passion)

Cal askedHow will you grow business in your area?

Smith's signature issue: only about 1,963 fully Navajo-owned businesses exist while more than 91,000 residents commute to border towns for work. He ties the gap to dual taxation and grazing-permit and home-site/business-site lease barriers — you can't run a business from a home-site lease — and would fix grazing-permit issues to open home sites, business sites, and alternative energy (solar, wind, hydro), negotiating with the federal trust responsibility.

Follow-up questions worth asking

Sovereignty & Getting Off Dependency

Cal askedHow do you protect the Nation's future?

Smith frames the treaty as having traded Navajo self-sufficiency for federal promises, warns that federal funding will shrink, and says the Nation must take risks, reform its tax codes, and reduce dependency before treaties or protections are pulled.

Follow-up questions worth asking

Questions that didn’t come up

Topics a voter in this district might still want to hear about:

What a strong answer sounds like

Not a judgment of this candidate — just what a specific, substantive answer includes, so you can weigh any candidate’s response:

Economic Development: Lay out the business-development and tax/lease plan.
Governance Knowledge: Detail the Title II fix you'd support.
Veterans: Name a concrete local veteran step.
Long-Term Vision: Map the path off federal dependency.
This page is a nonpartisan civic-education resource. The Diné Civic Center does not endorse, rank, or recommend any candidate.

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