By March 1934, federal Indian policy was at a breaking point. Nearly half a century of allotment‑era policies, launched under the Dawes Act of 1887, had devastated Native nations. Communal lands had been carved into individual parcels, “surplus” lands sold to non‑Indians, and tribal governments weakened or dismantled. The results were catastrophic: widespread poverty, land loss, cultural suppression, and federal mismanagement. The Meriam Report of 1928, commissioned by Congress, exposed these failures in stark detail, describing reservation conditions as economically unsustainable and morally indefensible.
When Franklin D. Roosevelt entered office in 1933, his administration sought sweeping reforms across federal policy—including Indian affairs. Roosevelt appointed John Collier as Commissioner of Indian Affairs, a longtime critic of allotment and advocate for tribal cultural survival. Collier envisioned what he called an “Indian New Deal”, a program that would restore tribal self‑government, halt land loss, and rebuild Native economies.
On March 20, 1934, Collier’s reform blueprint was circulating through congressional committees, gaining shape as the bill that would become the Indian Reorganization Act. Lawmakers debated how far the federal government should go in reversing decades of assimilationist policy. Early drafts proposed ending allotment entirely, restoring surplus lands to tribes, creating a revolving credit fund for tribal development, and encouraging tribes to adopt written constitutions—provisions that would survive into the final act.


