In 2003, Cara Cowan won her first Tribal Councilor election in District 7 with 66% of the vote, the highest winning percentage of any Tribal Councilor in that election. At the time she was the youngest
Cherokee Nation tribal councilor in history at 29. She defeated incumbent Harold DeMoss. She served as deputy speaker of the tribal council from 2007 to 2011 and as acting speaker in 2011. She was re-elected in 2011 to District 5, Seat 2 after redistricting and sworn in on August 14, 2011. After another round of redistricting, she represented the 13th district starting August 14, 2013. Cowan Watts served as a Tribal Councilor for the Cherokee Nation from 2003 to 2015 when she was term limited. She was succeeded by Buel Anglen. In 2019, Cowan Watts ran against incumbent
Cherokee Nation tribal councilor
Keith Austin in the 14th district; she lost the election.
Anglen vs Cowan Watts lawsuit On March 19, 2013, Tribal Councilor Buel Anglen filed a lawsuit in Cherokee Nation District Court against Tribal Councilor Cara Cowan Watts and the tribe's Election Commission. Anglen's petition challenged the constitutionality of new election laws under the
Cherokee Nation constitution. Anglen opposed Legislative Act 26-12, which would change the voting districts within the Cherokee Nation boundaries from 5 to 15 and redistrict the tribal council. The redistricting placed Cowan Watts in District 13, a district she did not live in. On January 23, 2013, Judge Bart Fite of the Cherokee Nation district court upheld the legality of the new district maps, which would create 15 districts plus two at-large districts. The ruling was appealed to the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court and on February 28, 2013, the Court announced its decision to uphold the lower court's ruling.
Principal Chief campaigns Cowan Watts campaigned for
Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation in February 2015, but withdrew from the race in March. She lost the election to incumbent principal chief
Chuck Hoskin Jr. == Political positions ==