In February 2013 a symposium on the topic was held at the Smithsonian's
National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C. Subsequently, the
Oneida Indian Nation of New York sponsored a series of radio ads in each city to coincide with games of the 2013 season, each featuring a targeted message. A broader range of persons spoke in favor of change or open discussion, including local government leaders,
members of Congress, and
President Barack Obama. Statements in support of a name change by academic, civil rights and religious organizations were added to those that Native American groups have been making for decades.
Academic research The issue is often discussed in the media in terms of offensiveness or
political correctness, which reduces it to feelings and opinions, and prevents full understanding of the historical, psychological and sociological context provided by academic research on the negative effects of the use of Native American names and images by sports teams. The effect of stereotyping on high or low expectations, confidence, and academic performance has been well-established. This effect is enhanced due to the invisibility of Native Americans in mainstream society and media, leaving stereotypes as the primary basis for thinking about the abilities and traits associated with Natives, including the roles and opportunities Natives Americans envision for themselves. Furthermore, even when stereotypes are positive (e.g. "Native Americans are spiritual"), they may have a limiting, detrimental effect on individuals. Stereotyping may directly affect the academic performance and self-esteem of Native American youth, whose people face high rates of suicide, unemployment, and poverty. Euro-Americans exposed to mascots may be more likely to believe not only that such stereotypes are true, but that Native Americans have no identity beyond these stereotypes. Research indicates that exposure to any stereotypes increased the likelihood of stereotypical thinking with regard to other minority groups in addition to the target of the stereotype, a "spreading effect". with other fans Native Americans opposed to mascots point to the oversimplification of their culture by fans "playing Indian" with no understanding of the deeper meaning of feathers, face paint, chants, and dancing.
Richard Lapchick, director emeritus of Northeastern University's Center for the Study of Sport in Society, wrote: "Could you imagine people mocking African Americans in black face at a game? Yet go to a game where there is a team with an Indian name and you will see fans with war paint on their faces. Is this not the equivalent to black face?" The unofficial mascot of the Redskins team was Zema Williams (aka
Chief Zee), an
African American man who attended games for 38 years beginning in 1978 dressed in a red faux "Indian" costume, complete with feathered war bonnet and rubber tomahawk. Other fans dressed in similar costumes for games. In a report published by the
Center for American Progress summarizing the research on "The Real Impact of Native Mascots and Team Names on American Indian and Alaska Native Youth", a case is made that the public debate misses the point, since individual opinions on either side do not matter given the measurable effects on the mental health of Native American young people exposed to such misrepresentations of their ethnic identity, and the often hostile or insulting behavior of non-natives that occur when teams with such names and mascots play. Clinical Psychologist Michael Friedman writes that the use of Native imagery, in particular the use of a dictionary defined slur, is a form of
bullying, the negative impact of which is magnified by its being officially sanctioned. The majority of scholars argue that the use of any
stereotype, whether positive or negative, is a hindrance to the advancement of the targeted group. The national organizations representing several academic disciplines, after reviewing the research done on the issue, have passed resolutions calling for the end of all Native American mascots and images in sports. These include the Society of Indian Psychologists (1999), the
American Counseling Association (2001), the
American Psychological Association (2005), the
American Sociological Association (2007). and the
American Anthropological Association (2015). The executive board of the nation's leading organization of scholars of U.S. history approved a resolution in April 2015: "The
Organization of American Historians hereby adds its voice to the growing demands by Native American organizations, our sister disciplines, and conscientious people of all ethnic backgrounds, to change the name and logo of the Washington 'Redskins'."
Native American advocates of change In the 1940s the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) created a campaign to eliminate negative stereotyping of Native American people in the media. Over time, the campaign began to focus on Indian names and mascots in sports. The NCAI maintains that teams with mascots such as the
Braves and the
Redskins perpetuate negative stereotypes of Native American people, and demean their native traditions and rituals. The NCAI issued a new report in 2013 summarizing opposition to Indian mascots and team names generally, and the Washington Redskins in particular. In the trademark case, the TTAB placed significance on the NCAI opposition, estimating that the organization represented about 30% of the Native American population at the time the trademarks were granted, which met their criteria for a "substantial composite" of Native Americans finding the name disparaging. In its
amicus brief filed in the case, the NCAI states that the combined enrollment of its member tribes in 2013 was 1.2 million individuals. Many tribal councils have passed resolutions or issued statements regarding their opposition to the name of the Washington Redskins, including the
Cherokee and
Comanche Nations of Oklahoma, the Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, the Inter-Tribal Council of the
Five Civilized Tribes, the
Oneida Indian Nation (New York), the
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe (North Dakota) and the United South and Eastern Tribes (USET). In April 2014,
Navajo Nation Council voted in favor of a statement opposing the name of the Washington team, as well as other disparaging references to American Indians by other professional sports franchises. Other Native American groups advocating change include: the Native American Bar Association of DC, the National Caucus of Native American State Legislators, and the Society of American Indian Government Employees.
Redhawks culture jam On December 13, 2017, a group of Native Americans —
Rebecca Nagle (
Cherokee Nation), Sebastian Medina-Tayac (
Piscataway), Valarie Marie Proctor (
Cedarville Band of Piscataway), Jair Carrasco, (
Aymara), Lindsay Rodriguez (
Cheyenne Arapaho),
Jordan Marie Daniel (
Kul Wicasa Oyate) and Nick Courtney (
Makah) — created several authentic-appearing websites and a Twitter campaign that seemed to announce that the Washington Redskins had agreed to change its name to the "Washington Redhawks" for the 2018 season. At a news conference the following day the organizers stated that their effort was satire or parody, and were surprised that the Redskins issued a statement denying any plans to change, as if it were serious, or "fake news". The action was supported by some long-time activists on the issue including
Suzan Shown Harjo and
Jacqueline Keeler, who agreed that it served to stimulate new attention. In an interview, the organizers took exception to the
framing of their action as a "hoax", which has negative connotations of intending to mislead, which this was not.
Civil rights and religious organizations At its 2013 annual conference, the
Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (LCCHR), which includes the
NAACP and the
ACLU as members, passed a unanimous resolution of the 85 representatives present that, while recognizing that a business has the
First Amendment right to use any name that it chooses, others need not be complicit in the use of a pejorative and insulting name; and calling upon all Federal, state and local government entities "to end any preferential tax, zoning, or policy treatment that could be viewed as supporting the franchise as long as it retains its current team name". The resolution also commended the "current and former government officials, media outlets, and other entities that have encouraged the Washington Redskins franchise to change its team name or that have refused to be complicit in promoting the current team name". In response, the team released a brief statement reiterating their previous position, and quoting two individuals as being both Native American and Redskins fans who do not want the name to change. The LCCHR also issued a press release in 2014 applauding the decision to cancel the trademark protection for the team's name. The
NAACP issued their own press release supporting the TTAB decision stating "The NAACP has called specifically for this name change since 1992, and will continue to stand with the Native Indian community until the derogatory moniker has been changed." The
Fritz Pollard Alliance, a non-profit organization closely allied with the NFL on civil rights issues, announced its support of a name change in 2015 after repeated attempts to discuss the issue with the team owner and representatives. An attorney for the Alliance, N. Jeremi Duru, an American University law professor, made a study of the controversy in which he concluded that Native Americans are justified in finding the name offensive. In 1992, the
Central Conference of American Rabbis issued a resolution calling for the end of sports teams names that promote racism, in particular the Atlanta Braves and the Washington Redskins. The
Anti-Defamation League was one of the organizations signing a letter to broadcasters urging them to avoid using the name. The
Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism also advocated a name change. In 2013 a group of 61 religious leaders in Washington, D.C., sent a letter to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and team owner Dan Snyder stating their moral obligation to join the Change the Mascot movement due to the offensive and inappropriate nature of the name which causes pain whether or not that is intended. In June 2015, the
United Church of Christ General
Synod passed a resolution calling for a stop to using images or mascots that could be demeaning to the Native American community.
Protests Although often assumed to be a debate of recent origins, local Washington, D.C. newspapers published news items on the controversy many times since at least 1971, all in response to Native American individuals or organizations asking for the name to be changed. National protests began in 1988, after the team's
Super Bowl XXII victory, prompting numerous Native Americans to write letters to Redskins owner
Jack Kent Cooke; others boycotted Redskins products and protested, but Cooke rejected the possibility of change. There was a protest of about 2,000 people at the
1992 Super Bowl between the Redskins and the
Buffalo Bills; the American Indian Movement's (AIM)
Vernon Bellecourt was one of the main organizers of the protest. From 2013 to 2019, picketing at stadiums occurred occasionally when the Redskins played, particularly in cities with a significant population of Native Americans, such as
Dallas,
Denver and
Minneapolis. The latter protest was supported by several Minnesota politicians and was documented by two films:
Dodging Bullets—Stories from Survivors of Historical Trauma and More Than A Word. Picketing resumed for the 2014 season in Glendale, Arizona, when the team played the
Arizona Cardinals, and again the largest rally was in Minneapolis, where estimates of the number of protestors was between 3,500 and 5,000. At a protest in Philadelphia in 2017, Native Americans pointed out the irony of NFL players making a statement opposing racial injustice by "taking a knee" for the National Anthem while one of the teams taking the field continues to use a racially offensive name and logo. Playing in Minnesota for the first time since 2014, hundreds of Native Americans protested against the team name outside of U.S. Bank Stadium during the game on October 24, 2019. On December 8, 2019, members of the Wisconsin Indian Education Association's Indian Mascot and Logo Task Force led a protest at
Lambeau Field in Wisconsin. The
Oneida Nation sponsored a video shown on the Jumbotron during the game expressing pride in being Native American as the antithesis of the message sent by the Redskins name and logo.
FedEx owned the naming rights to the team's stadium,
FedExField until 2024, and had been the only corporate sponsor officially subject to boycotts by Native Americans: the
Osage Nation, the Native American Rights Fund (NARF), and the Central Council of
Tlingit and
Haida Indian Tribes, the largest tribe of
Native Alaskan peoples. ==Responses to the controversy==