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In 2019, Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachussetts began to resile from previous statements she had made about her Native American ancestry, a source of criticism that had been used against her since she first ran for the U.S. Senate in 2012. During that 2012 campaign, the Boston Globe revealed that Warren had listed herself as a member of a racial or ethnic minority in a directory of law professors between 1985 and 1996, after it emerged that Harvard Law School, where she taught from 1995 to 2011, had publicly described her as a Native American during her tenure there. (In 2018, dozens of Warren's colleagues over her decades as a law professor told the Globe that perceptions of her Native American ancestry had played no role in her rise through the ranks of legal academia.) In reality, Warren has very little Native American ancestry (albeit more than the average American of European origins), but her public pronouncements, including professing herself to be very proud of her heritage, have attracted criticism and even ridicule since 2012. President Donald Trump routinely refers to the Democratic senator with the mocking epithet Pocahontas and on one occasion offered to pay $1 million to a charity of Warren's choice if she could demonstrate Native American ancestry. Warren did just that in October 2018, when she published the results of a DNA test which concluded that the vast majority of her ancestry was European but that her lineage was very likely to include one Native American ancestor somewhere between six and 10 generations ago. The DNA test engendered further controversy, and Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr. strongly criticized Warren's actions, writing in a statement that Using a DNA test to lay claim to any connection to the Cherokee Nation or any tribal nation, even vaguely, is inappropriate and wrong. It makes a mockery out of DNA tests and its legitimate uses while also dishonoring legitimate tribal governments and their citizens, whose ancestors are well documented and whose heritage is proven. Senator Warren is undermining tribal interests with her continued claims of tribal heritage. On 31 December 2018, Warren announced she was launching an exploratory committee for a 2020 presidential campaign and was widely expected to formally declare her candidacy for that office in early 2019. Against that background, the high-profile Democrat began in February 2019 to step back from her earlier public statements about her Native American ancestry. First, the Cherokee Nation revealed that Warren had contacted tribal leaders and apologized for touting the results of her DNA test as evidence of her Native American ancestry. Then on 5 February, the Washington Post reported that Warren had issued a significantly expanded statement, apologizing for describing herself as Native American for many years: The revelation that Warren had personally described herself as American Indian, in her own handwriting, formed the basis of widespread news reports on 5 and 6 February 2019 and prompted enquiries from Snopes readers about the authenticity of the document described by the Washington Post. We can confirm that the document is authentic. The State Bar of Texas, the agency that originally issued it, sent us a redacted copy of Warren's 1986 Texas State Bar registration card, which can be viewed below: The card showed that in blue ink, Warren entered her race as American Indian, listing her office address as 727 E. 26th Street in Austin -- the address of the University of Texas law school, where she was a professor at the time. The card was signed by Warren and was dated 18 April 1986. On 6 February, Warren addressed the 1986 Texas Bar registration card when speaking to reporters in Washington, D.C.:
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