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"DC voting rights: a moral imperative"

Today, April 16, is Emancipation Day in the District of Columbia.  A commemoration of Abraham Lincoln's abolishment of slavery in DC in 1862, Emancipation Day 2007 has an entirely new target - voting rights for District citizens.

Rob Getzschman has an excellent op-ed in the Christian Science Monitor on the injustice that DC citizens suffer to this day:

The Constitution states that Congress shall "exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever" over the district. Yet its citizens aren't allowed a representative or senator to participate in the lawmaking process. That's 580,000 US citizens who are taxed without representation, taken to war without representation, and subject to laws they have no say in devising. Even the city's budget is subject to congression­al approval, leaving local officials at the mercy of a body they don't elect.

Getzschman lays out his argument excellent - serously, go read the entire article.  There are a number of points in it that are impossible to argue with.  For example:

If spreading democracy is the imperative of the last remaining superpower, then the mandate for the US is to honor D.C. vot­ing rights. To tolerate the status quo smacks of hypocrisy to foreign governments. As a senior Hong Kong official told Rep. Tom Davis (R) of Virginia in 2005, "Give your nation's capital the right to vote and then come talk to us about democracy in Hong Kong."

Sadly, partisan maneuvering belies the political nature of the D.C. voting rights issue. Yeas and nays fall along party lines due to the district's Democratic majority, and opponents see the enfranchisement of 580,000 US citizens as a "power grab" for the Democrats. The issue, however, is emphatically nonpartisan. Voting rights are rooted in the Constitution, not the partisan makeup of a region.

I'll steal one more line from him, the choice words he closes with - and that are being echoed by the residents of this fine city today and every other day that goes by with taxation without representation:

As a district citizen, I'm looking forward to someday celebrating "Emancipation Day" without a hint of irony.


Tags: DC, DC voting rights, voting rights, taxation without representation, Christian Science Monitor (all tags)


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DC voting power=more Demos in office

Once again we see more support for Democrats, by the extremely biased Common Cause. Is anyone unaware of the overwhelmingly left-leaning population of the District of Colombia, which of course is the real motivation behind the constant articles on this blog.

by La Perla on Tue Apr 17, 2007 at 12:15:24 AM EST


Give it up!

DC citizens want representation in Congress - it doesn't matter to them who their neighbor votes for, and it doesn't matter to Common Cause.  This is a matter of fairness and equality, plain and simple.  

Unfortunately, there are those that take a partisan stance on this issue - there are many Republicans who are hesitant to give DC the vote because they assume it would go Democratic.  This necessitated the compromise in Rep. Davis' bill that would give Utah another Representative, presumed to go Republican.

La Perla, even though your point is negated by the bill, I still find it interesting that you and others who argue your position would deny the 600,000 American citizens of the District of Columbia their full constitutional rights simply for partisan reasons.  Where's the patriotism in that?

by Kirstin Ellison on Tue Apr 17, 2007 at 10:02:01 AM EST
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