In a blow to the Texas Attorney Generalโ€™s Office, a federal appeals court on Friday reversed a lower courtโ€™s October 2018 ruling that struck down as unconstitutional the Indian Child Welfare Act, a decades-old federal law that aims to keep Native American families together.

Arguing that the law โ€œelevates a child’s race over their best interest,โ€ Texas sued in October 2017 on behalf of a non-Native couple from Fort Worth that wanted to adopt a Native American toddler they had fostered for more than a year, but were rebuffed during state adoption proceedings. ICWA gives placement preference in adoption cases to biological family members, other members of the childโ€™s tribe and other Native American families. Passed in 1978, the law was Congressโ€™ attempt to keep native families together at a time when as many as one-third of tribal children were being forcibly removed from their biological families through state welfare proceedings.

The couple, Chad and Jennifer Brackeen, have since successfully adopted the child, but their challenge to the law persisted. Last fall, a federal judge in North Texas ruled that the law violates constitutional principles of equal protection because it โ€œuses ancestry as a proxy for raceโ€ and does not meet the high, โ€œstrict scrutinyโ€ burden required for laws that rely on racial classifications.

But the New Orleans-based U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals this week overturned that assessment, citing the federal governmentโ€™s historical obligations to Native tribes in ruling that the lawโ€™s definition of โ€œIndian childโ€ should be interpreted as a โ€œpolitical classificationโ€ as opposed to a racial one.

The law and associated rules are โ€œconstitutional because they are based on a political classification that is rationally related to the fulfillment of Congressโ€™s unique obligation toward Indians,โ€ U.S. Circuit Judge James Dennis wrote for the three-judge panel. Dennis pointed to a large body of laws intended to protect Native American communities: โ€œIf these laws, derived from historical relationships and explicitly designed to help only Indians, were deemed invidious racial discrimination, an entire Title of the United States Code (25 U.S.C.) would be effectively erased and the solemn commitment of the Government toward the Indians would be jeopardized,โ€ Dennis wrote, quoting an older case.

A coalition of tribal leaders, who have watched the case carefully, cheered the appeals courtโ€™s ruling, which they said โ€œreaffirmed what we already knew: the Indian Child Welfare Act is constitutional and serves the best interests of children and families.โ€

โ€œWe are pleased that the court followed decades of legal precedent in its ruling, preserving a law that protects Indian children and allows them to retain their identity by staying within their families and tribal communities,โ€ Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Bill John Baker, Morongo Band of Mission Indians Chairman Robert Martin, Oneida Nation Chairman Tehassi Hill and Quinault Indian Nation President Fawn Sharp said in a joint statement. The four tribes had intervened in the case to defend the law. The law, they said, โ€œensures that we have a process in place focusing first and foremost on the welfare and safety of children.โ€

An additional 325 tribes and 57 tribal organizations submitted friend-of-the-court briefs backing the law.

A spokesman for the Texas Attorney Generalโ€™s Office said Aug. 12 he anticipates the agency will appeal.

“We are disappointed in the panelโ€™s decision which fails to provide justification for the federal government preventing Texas law from putting the interests of children first,” said Marc Rylander, communications director for the attorney general’s office. “While we are still reviewing the opinion, we anticipate seeking further appellate review of the important issues raised by this case.”

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Emma Platoff was a reporter at the Tribune from 2017 to 2021, most recently covering the law and its intersection with politics. A graduate of Yale University, Emma is the former managing editor of the...