Alaskans vow pushback if Trump targets mountain's new name - Action News
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Alaskans vow pushback if Trump targets mountain's new name

Among Donald Trump's many promises on his way to the White House was a tweeted vow to change the new name of North America's tallest mountain back to Mount McKinley.

Obama renamed North America's tallest mountain Denali last year, Trump was not impressed

Changing the name of Denali back to Mount McKinley would require a presidential executive order or an act of Congress, according to the federal board that oversees place names. (Becky Bohrer/Associated Press)

Among Donald Trump's many promises on his way to the White House was a tweeted vow to change the new name of North America's tallest mountain back to Mount McKinley.

The Obama administration renamed the Alaska peak Denali in a symbolic gesture to Alaska Natives ahead of the president's visit to the state last year.

Alaskans long have informally called the mountain Denali "the great one" in Athabascan. But the U.S.government recognized the name invoking the 25th president, William McKinley, who was born in Ohio and assassinated early in his second term. McKinley never set foot in Alaska.

In his tweet, Trump called the name switch a "great insult to Ohio."

But if he indeed moves to undo it, Trump can expect pushback from Alaskans.

"We wanted that change for a long time, and now we finally have it, and we need to leave it alone," said Victor Joseph, president of Tanana Chiefs Conference, a consortium of 42 Athabascan tribes in Interior Alaska. The organization spent years advocating for what they consider the 6,190-metrepeak's original name.

"It was an insult to the first people of this land when they took away the name and gave it to somebody else," Joseph said.

Trump's intentions unknown

It's unclear at this early stage if Trump will take action. Changing the name would require a presidential executive order or an act of Congress, according to the federal board that oversees place names.

Troy Eid, chairman of the Indian Law and Order Commission and a member of Trump's transition team, said in an emailTuesdayhe was not in a position to comment.

The three Republicans who make up Alaska's congressional delegation either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment. Sen. Lisa Murkowski -- who called for Trump to leave the Republican ticket after the emergence of a recording of Trump making lewd comments about women -- long advocated for the mountain's Alaska
Native name and thanked President Barack Obama for embracing it.

Republican Ohio Rep. Bob Gibbs slammed the name swap as Obama's "constitutional overreach," and said he would look at trying to prevent it. This week, his spokesman Dallas Gerber said Gibbs hasn't decided what legislation he'll introduce in the next Congress.

Alaska had a standing request with the federal government to rename the mountain dating to 1975, when a state board adopted the Denali name.