Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Statehood for Washington, D.C., passes House for first time

- By Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — The House of Representa­tives voted Friday to make Washington, D.C., a state — the first time in history the proposal has passed a chamber of Congress.

The bill, decades in the making, passed the House by a 232-180 vote, almost completely along party lines, with one Democrat voting no, and no Republican­s joining the majority.

That is likely where the fight for statehood ends, at least for now. It has little chance of being considered by the Senate, and the White House has said President

Donald Trump would veto it if it did pass.

Introduced by Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the district’s nonvoting House representa­tive, the bill would shrink the federal capital to a small area including the White House, Capitol building, Supreme Court and other federal buildings along the National Mall.

The rest of the city, and its 705,000 predominan­tly nonwhite residents, would become the 51st state, named the Washington, Douglass Commonweal­th. As a state, Washington would have two votes in the Senate and one in the House; the city’s residents currently do not have voting representa­tion, although they are allowed to vote for president.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters Friday the population, which is larger than two states, has been disenfranc­hised for too long. The House last considered statehood for the district in 1993, although advocates have pushed the issue decade after decade.

“People in the District of Columbia pay taxes, fight our wars, risk their lives for our democracy, and yet in this place they have no vote in the House and Senate about whether we go to war and how those taxes are exacted and how it’s all played,” Ms. Pelosi said.

Republican­s, including Mr. Trump, have accused Democrats of wanting to turn the reliably blue District into a state to seize control of the Senate. Since 2000, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee has on average received at least 89% of the vote in the district.

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., called the move “a naked power grab” during a speech on the Senate floor Thursday, adding Democrats “want two new Democratic senators in perpetuity.”

“The Democrats are angry at the American people for refusing to give them total control of the government for going on a decade now, so they want to give the swamp as many senators as your state has.”

Ms. Pelosi said the politics of a place shouldn’t determine whether its citizens get a voice in Congress. She also noted that the politics of a state can, and do, change over time.

Mr. Cotton dismissed the district as having little to offer as a state other than lobbyists and federal workers.

“Yes, Wyoming is smaller than Washington by population, but it has three times as many workers in mining, logging and constructi­on, and 10 times as many workers in manufactur­ing. … In other words, Wyoming is a well-rounded working-class state,” Mr. Cotton said.

“What vital industries would the new state of Washington represent? Lobbying? Bureaucrac­y? Give me a break. By far, the largest group of workers in the city are bureaucrat­s and other white-collar profession­als. [It] would be nothing more than an appendage of the fed government.”

Labor statistics for the District in 2019 show about 25% of the workforce was employed by the federal government.

The vote was scheduled following weeks of friction between Mr. Trump and Washington city leaders over the proper response to people protesting racism and the killing of George Floyd.

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