Early life and education
Shelly was born in Thoreau, New Mexico, on July 6, 1947. He was clan born for . His maternal grandfather is and his paternal grandfather is . Shelly's wife of 45 years, Martha Shelly, is originally from Coyote Canyon. She is and born for .he was in Chicago for 16 years They have five children and 10 grandchildren. Shelly lived in Chicago for 16 years, training in heavy equipment maintenance and working as a supervisor for a heavy equipment company. He moved back to the Navajo Nation in 1976, and owned a fleet maintenance and mechanic shop.Politics
In 1990, Shelly was chairman of the Dineh Rights Association.Navajo Nation Council delegate
Shelly became the Thoreau Navajo Nation councilman in 1991, and in 1993 he campaigned for legalized gambling in Navajo areas. He became a member of the Transportation and Intergovernmental Relations Committees, and chairman of the Budget and Finance Committee as well as serving 12 years as a McKinley County Commissioner. He was in the leadership of the National Associations of Counties Organization, where he helped form a Native American coalition of county officials from Apache, Coconino, San Juan of Utah, San Juan of New Mexico, Navajo, Sandoval, and McKinley counties.Navajo Nation Vice-President
In 2006, Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley, Jr. selected Shelly as hisProbe of Tribal Council discretionary funds
In October 2010, Ben Shelly, among other Navajo tribal officials, were charged in an investigation of slush funds just weeks before the November election. Shelly pleaded not guilty to those tribal charges of fraud, conspiracy and theft. Each misdemeanor count carried a penalty of up to a year in jail and $5,000 if convicted. Shelly had stated that he was confident that the conspiracy, fraud, and theft charges against him would be dismissed, and that he is not a crook. Criminal complaints allege that Shelly unlawfully took $8,850 in tribal discretionary funds to benefit himself and his family while he served on the Tribal Council. He pleaded not guilty and said the money was for "Legitimate Hardships." Court documents allege that Shelly conspired to benefit himself and his immediate family, including his wife, grandchildren and a sister, in 2005 and 2006. On four occasions, Shelly filed applications for discretionary funds on behalf of his family and personally approved the requests, a complaint alleged. Tribal ethics and rules laws have limits on the value of gifts lawmakers can receive and prohibit engaging in conflicts of interest. Police served some delegates with the complaints just before they convened for the fourth day of their fall session in the tribal capital of Window Rock. The Tribal Council called for a special prosecutor in 2009 to look into the Navajo tribal president Joe Shirley Jr.'s relationship with two companies that had operated on the reservation. The Navajo attorney general accepted that request but also expanded the probe to include the council's use of discretionary funds, to the surprise of the council.Deseret NewsNavajo Nation President (2011–2015)
In the Navajo Nation Tribal presidential election, held on November 2, 2010, Shelly defeated New Mexico Sen. Lynda Lovejoy, becoming the first vice president to be elected to the Navajo Nation presidency, dashing Lovejoy's hopes of becoming the tribe's first female president. Shelly was sworn in as president on January 11, 2011. Despite Vice President Shelly facing criminal charges in the probe of the council's controversial use of discretionary funds, he would go on to win the 2010 election. Later, Shelly would be cleared of any wrongdoing. Shelly would serve as president during the 88-member Tribal Council reduction following the special election of December 2009 that was aimed at reforming the Navajo government. Shelly received 52 percent of the vote in the 2010 presidential race. His opponent, New Mexico state senator Lynda Lovejoy, garnered 47 percent of the vote - 33,692 votes to Lovejoy's 30,357. Voter turnout hit nearly 58 percent in the 2010 tribal elections. In his last days as Navajo President, he would veto various controversial bills affecting the still as-yet-decided 2014 Navajo presidential Race. Shelly's presidential term was extended five months after the uncertainty of The Navajo Nation presidential election affected his term in office, The Shelly-Jim administration term officially ended on May 12, 2015, during which a flag retiring ceremony for the Navajo and U.S. flags that flew for the Shelly-Jim administration were retired and new ones flown.2015 Navajo Nation presidential election
During the Navajo Nation primary election on August 26, 2014, President Ben Shelly lost his bid for a second term with only 2,446 votes from 110 chapters. Former Arizona representative Chris Deschene and former two-term Navajo Nation president Joe Shirley Jr. were to move on to the general election, but the Navajo Supreme Court suspended the 2014 general election, and the Council subsequently delayed the election further. Ben Shelly's term ended January 13, 2015. As determined by the Navajo Nation Code §1006, the speaker of the Navajo Council shall assume the duties of the office in the event a vacancy of both the president and vice president.Navajo Nation president interim appointee (2015)
In a controversial appointment, Ben Shelly was designated interim president; contradicting Navajo Nation Code § 1006 in resolutions referenced as CD-80-14 and CD-81-14. on May 12, 2015, Ben Shelly and Rex Lee Jim finished their one term which was unprecedentedly extended another five months, after problems with the disqualification of presidential hopeful Chris Deschenee and the ongoing special election between Joe Shirley Jr. and Russell Begaye. On that day the Shelly-Jim Administration passed the Navajo Nation executive office to newly-elected Navajo president-elect Russell Begaye and vice president-elect Johnathon Nez.Death
Shelly died on March 22, 2023, at a hospital in Gallup, New Mexico at the age of 75. His spokesman stated he died from a “long illness”. Navajo nation president Buu Nygren ordered the flags on the Navajo reservation to be lowered.References
External links
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Shelly, Ben 1947 births 2023 deaths 20th-century Native American people 21st-century Native American people Members of the Navajo Nation Council New Mexico Democrats People from McKinley County, New Mexico Presidents of the Navajo Nation Vice presidents of the Navajo Nation