Orlando Sentinel

After fed crackdown, House to vote on statehood for DC

- By Emily Cochrane

WASHINGTON — Democrats announced Tuesday that the House would vote this month on statehood for the District of Columbia, capitalizi­ng on anger over the Trump administra­tion’s handling of racial justice protests in the nation’s capital to set the first vote on the issue in more than a quarter-century.

The movement to transform the nation’s capital into the 51st state has been galvanized in recent months by the new Democratic majority in the House, where more than 200 Democrats have signed on to the statehood legislatio­n, now scheduled for a June 26 vote.

But the Trump administra­tion’s use of federal officers in the District to respond to protests over the killing last month of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapoli­s has intensifie­d calls for the nation’s capital to be given the same rights — including voting representa­tion in Congress — that all 50 states have.

“Over the past few weeks, we saw further examples of why the District of Columbia’s lack of representa­tion in Congress is so damaging,” said Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the majority leader.

“We are the only free nation in the world whose capital doesn’t have voting representa­tion in their parliament.”

Because Congress retains so much control over the District, its mayor, Muriel Bowser, had few options this month when President

Donald Trump and his administra­tion flooded the streets of Washington with National Guard forces from elsewhere and troops in riot gear, as well as violently clearing protesters from Lafayette Square outside the White House.

For decades, residents of the

District of Columbia — a majoritymi­nority city of 700,000 whose license plates read “Taxation Without Representa­tion” — have felt the detrimenta­l effects of not being part of a state.

In the $2.2 trillion stimulus law enacted in March to blunt the economic pain wrought by the coronaviru­s crisis, the District received a small fraction of the funds doled out to states because it was treated as a territory, in defiance of custom that usually accommodat­es funding for its residents as if they lived in a state. That was the case even though it had a high number of cases and a large minority population, which data shows is more profoundly affected by COVID-19.

“This deprivatio­n of statehood is unjust, unequal, undemocrat­ic and unacceptab­le,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said at a news conference announcing the vote, where she recalled how her father, Thomas D’Alesandro Jr., who represente­d Maryland in the House and led the Appropriat­ions panel that controlled the District’s budget, was once considered “the unofficial mayor of Washington.”

“He did not agree with that,” Pelosi said.

The legislatio­n put forward by Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District’s nonvoting delegate to the

House, would establish the state of Washington, Douglass Commonweal­th, and allow for it to have two senators and a voting representa­tive.

The federally controlled district would be reduced to the National Mall, the White House, Capitol Hill and some other federal property, leaving the rest of the land for the new state.

“Three generation­s of my family have yet to attain the votes Americans take for granted,” Norton said, reflecting on her family’s roots in the district. “Statehood is priceless. Statehood assures that living in the nation’s capital is about pride, not prejudice.”

The legislatio­n is expected to pass the Democratic-led House, which would mark the first time any chamber of Congress had given approval to D.C. statehood legislatio­n.

But because the District is overwhelmi­ngly Democratic, support has fallen along starkly partisan lines. The bill is unlikely to be taken up by the Republican-led Senate, where Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the majority leader, has called the statehood push “full-bore socialism.”

Activists who have long pressed for statehood for the District of Columbia cheered the plans for a House vote.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowse had few options when President Trump flooded her streets with National Guard troops.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowse had few options when President Trump flooded her streets with National Guard troops.

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