The Punxsutawney Spirit

Biden signs measure nullifying DC criminal code revisions

- By Ashraf Khalil

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Monday signed into law legislatio­n nullifying the recent overhaul of the District of Columbia criminal code, but the fight between Congress and local lawmakers is continuing.

The signature merely marks the end of a raucous first chapter in a saga that has left district lawmakers bitterly nursing their political bruises, harboring fresh resentment­s against national Democrats and bracing to play defense against an activist Republican-controlled House for at least the next two years.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy hailed the move in a statement, calling it the end of what he labeled a “softon-crime criminal code rewrite that treated violent criminals like victims and discarded the views of law enforcemen­t.”

But even before the bill was formally sent to sent to Biden, House Republican­s were promising a season of direct congressio­nal interventi­on in local D.C. affairs.

“This is just the beginning,” McCarthy, R-Calif., said earlier this month in a celebrator­y signing ceremony after the vote to cancel the new criminal code passed the Senate with significan­t Democratic support. “It is a message for the entire nation.”

D.C. Council members sound like they fully believe those promises.

“I’m afraid that we’re going to see more of this for the remainder of this Congress,” D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson said. “Does this raise a concern that there are going to be other issues? Yes.”

When congressio­nal passage of the measure appeared inevitable and Biden indicated he would sign it, the D.C. Council withdrew the measure. But the move did not spare Biden a politicall­y charged decision on whether to endorse the congressio­nal action.

Biden did not issue a statement accompanyi­ng the signing Monday. But he tweeted earlier this month that while he supported statehood for D.C., “I don’t support some of the changes D.C. Council put forward over the mayor’s objections — such as lowering penalties for carjacking­s.”

Under terms of Washington’s Home Rule authority, the House Committee on Oversight and Accountabi­lity essentiall­y vets all new D.C. laws and frequently alters or limits them through budget riders. But the criminal code rewrite is the first law to be completely overturned since 1991.

House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., has pledged that his committee “stands ready to conduct robust oversight of America’s capital city.”

That robust oversight has already begun. Even before Biden signed the bill, the Oversight Committee sent letters summoning Mendelson, D.C. Councilmem­ber Charles Allen and D.C. Chief Financial Officer Glen Lee to testify at a March 29 hearing. The topic of that hearing, according to the letter, is the vague “general oversight of the District of Columbia, including crime, safety, and city management.”

Other House Republican­s have already identified areas of interest to target. Rep. Andrew Clyde of Georgia has introduced a resolution to block a police accountabi­lity law known as the Comprehens­ive Policing and Justice Reform Amendment Act.

Most aspects of that law were passed by the D.C. Council on an emergency basis in 2020, amid the protests against police brutality following George Floyd’s murder; it was made permanent in December 2022. It bans the use of chokeholds by police officers, makes police disciplina­ry files available to the public, weakens the bargaining power of the police union and limits the use of tear gas to disperse protestors.

“Now that Congress has effectivel­y used its constituti­onal authority to strike down the D.C. Council’s dangerous Revised Criminal Code Act, we must now move to swiftly block this antipolice measure to ensure our nation’s capital city is safe for all Americans,” Clyde said in a statement.

Clyde is a longtime nemesis of D.C. loyalists, having publicly stated that his ultimate goal is to completely end Washington’s Home Rule authority. That sentiment, once a long-shot fringe position, has edged closer to being a mainstream Republican talking point. Former President Donald Trump publicly stated earlier this month that the “federal government should take over control and management of Washington D.C.”

Meanwhile, Oversight Committee member Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., has targeted the D.C. Jail for congressio­nal scrutiny. Greene has demanded access to the jail to visit some two dozen detainees from the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol. She’s also seeking a complete overview of the jail’s conditions.

Other aspects of D.C. legislatio­n remain ripe targets for activist Republican­s, such as the District’s strict gun control laws or the decision to essentiall­y decriminal­ize most psychedeli­cs — a move that was approved by D.C. voters in a referendum.

This congressio­nal onslaught of oversight was widely predicted when Republican­s took back control of the House in last year’s midterm elections. But most local politician­s and activists hoped they could count on Democratic control of both the Senate and the White House as a shield. Those hopes rapidly melted away in a storm of political dynamics that amounted to a humiliatin­g setback for the D.C. Council and the larger hopes of Washington ever achieving statehood.

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