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View Full Version : DC Residents Closer To Vote In Congress


ECW
11-23-2006, 07:27 AM
Despite what many Americans think, the residents of Washington DC do not have any voting representation in Congress. It looks like that will finally change if the lame duck rubber stampers act on this legislation.

WASHINGTON — For decades, efforts to give the District of Columbia a voting representative in Congress have run into a brick wall. Constitutional amendments failed to win the states' support. Ad campaigns about "taxation without representation" did not help the cause.

Now, unexpected political forces are aligning behind a plan to give the district a House vote — along with a new seat in Congress for Utah — when lawmakers return for their lame-duck session in early December.

"This is closest we've come in at least 30 years," said Ilir Zherka, executive director of DC Vote, an umbrella lobbying group. "The stars are aligned on this."

The unlikely union of the District of Columbia and Utah is the brainchild of Rep. Thomas M. Davis III (R-Va.). Davis, who represents the district's Virginia suburbs, said he offered his proposal to "take the partisanship out of this."

Efforts to empower D.C. residents in the past always came up against the partisan reality that Republicans were unlikely to vote for a safe Democratic seat for the district, a Democratic stronghold with a 57% African American population.

The problem for Utah is that the 2000 census left it 857 residents short of getting a fourth member of Congress — a decision the state protested to the U.S. Supreme Court, saying the census failed to count the thousands of Mormons serving abroad as missionaries. Utah lost the case.

For the district, not being declared a state by the founding fathers means the city's 515,000 residents pay federal taxes, cast votes in presidential elections and serve in the military without having a voting member in either the House or the Senate. The district does have a nonvoting at-large representative, Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton.

By balancing the district with reliably Republican Utah, Davis won bipartisan approval in May by the Government Reform Committee for his bill, which would raise the total number of House members to 437.

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link (http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-dcvote22nov22,1,4035948.story?track=rss)