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District of Columbia statehood movement

The District of Columbia statehood movement is a political movement that advocates making the District of Columbia a U.S. state, to provide the residents of the District of Columbia with voting representation in the Congress and complete control over local affairs.

The Flag of the District of Columbia
A protest variant of the flag, from 2002

Since its establishment by the "District Clause" in Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 of the United States Constitution, the District of Columbia has been a federal district under the exclusive legislative jurisdiction of the United States Congress. It is currently debated whether the District of Columbia could be made a state by an act of Congress or whether it would require a constitutional amendment. Alternative proposals to statehood include the retrocession of the District of Columbia and voting rights reforms. If the District of Columbia were to become a state, it would be the first state admitted to the union since 1959.

As a state, it would rank 49th by population as of 2020 (ahead of Vermont and Wyoming);[1] 1st in population density as of 2020 (at 11,685 people/square mile compared to the next densest state, New Jersey with 1,207 people/square mile);[2] 51st by area;[3] 34th by GDP as of 2020;[4] 1st by GDP per capita as of 2019 (at $177,442 it is nearly 2.4 times the next state, Massachusetts at $75,258);[5] 1st in educational attainment in 2018 (with 59.7% of residents having a bachelor's degree and 34.0% having an advanced degree);[6] and 6th in terms of Human Development Index as of 2018.[7]

For most of the modern (1980–present) statehood movement, the new state's name would have been the State of New Columbia, although the Washington, D.C., Admission Act passed by the United States House of Representatives in 2020 and 2021 refers to the proposed state as the State of Washington, Douglass Commonwealth in honor of George Washington and Frederick Douglass.[8][9]

History Edit

 
The U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry has designed this 51-star version of the national flag for use if a 51st state is admitted into the Union.

District Clause of the Constitution Edit

In the late 18th century, several individuals believed that Congress needed control over the national capital. This belief resulted in the creation of a national capital, separate from any state, by the Constitution's District Clause, with a maximum area of 100 square miles (260 km2; 64,000 acres; 26,000 ha) (i.e., based on a "square" where the sides are no more than "ten miles" long).[10]

The "District Clause" in Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 of the United States Constitution states:

[The Congress shall have Power] To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular states, and the acceptance of Congress, become the seat of the government of the United States.

In support of the creation of the District of Columbia, Madison wrote in Federalist No. 43 that the residents of the new federal district "will have had their voice in the election of the government which is to exercise authority over them".[11] Madison did not elaborate as to how this would be but even with a then unidentified parcel suggested that the principles of self-government would not be absent in the capital of the Republic.

Early discussions of voting rights Edit

In 1788, the land on which the district was formed was ceded by Maryland. In 1790, Congress passed the Residence Act placing the district on the Potomac River between the Anacostia and Connogochegue with the exact location chosen by President George Washington. His selection was announced on January 24, 1791, and the Residence Act was amended to include land that Virginia had ceded in 1790. That land was returned to Virginia in 1847. The Congress did not officially move to the new federal capital until the first Monday in December 1800. During that time, the district was governed by a combination of a federally appointed board of commissioners, the state legislatures, and locally elected governments.[12]

Within a year of moving to the district, Congress passed the District of Columbia Organic Act of 1801 and incorporated the new federal district under its sole authority as permitted by the District Clause. Since the District of Columbia was no longer part of any state, the district's residents lost voting representation in Congress and the Electoral College and a voice in Constitutional Amendments and the right to home rule, facts that did not go without protest.[13] In January 1801, a meeting of district citizens was held which resulted in a statement to Congress commenting that as a result of the impending Organic Act "we shall be completely disfranchised in respect to the national government, while we retain no security for participating in the formation of even the most minute local regulations by which we are to be affected. We shall be reduced to that deprecated condition of which we pathetically complained in our charges against Great Britain, of being taxed without representation."[12]

Talk of suffrage for the District of Columbia began almost immediately, though it mostly focused on constitutional amendments and retrocession, not statehood. In 1801, Augustus Woodward, writing under the name Epaminondas, wrote a series of newspaper articles in the National Intelligencer proposing a constitutional amendment that would read, "The Territory of Columbia shall be entitled to one Senator in the Senate of the United States; and to a number of members in the House of Representatives proportionate to its population."[14] Since then more than 150 constitutional amendments and bills have been introduced to provide representation to the District of Columbia, resulting in congressional hearings on more than twenty occasions, with the first of those hearings in 1803.[15] At that time, resolutions were introduced by Congress to retrocede most of District of Columbia to Maryland. Citizens fearful that the seat of government be moved asked that D.C. be given a territorial government and an amendment to the Constitution for equal rights. But James Holland of North Carolina argued that creating a territorial government would leave citizens dissatisfied. He said, "the next step will be a request to be admitted as a member of the Union, and, if you pursue the practice relative to territories, you must, so soon as their numbers will authorize it, admit them into the Union."[16]

Late 19th and early 20th centuries Edit

The first proposal for congressional representation to get serious consideration came in 1888, but it would not be until 1921 that Congress would hold hearings on the subject. Those hearings resulted in the first bill, introduced by Sen. Wesley Livsey Jones (R-WA), to be reported out of committee that would have addressed District representation. The bill would have enabled – though not required – Congress to treat residents of D.C. as though they were citizens of a state.

Civil rights era and the Twenty-third Amendment, 1950s–1970s Edit

Congressional members continued to propose amendments to address the District's lack of representation, with efforts picking up as part of the Civil rights movement in the late 1950s. This eventually resulted in the successful passage of the Twenty-third Amendment in 1961, which granted the district votes in the Electoral College in proportion to their size as if they were a state, but no more than the least populous state. D.C. citizens have exercised this right since the presidential election of 1964.

With District citizens still denied full suffrage, members continued to propose bills to address congressional representation. Such bills made it out of committee in 1967 and 1972, to a House floor for a vote in 1976, and in 1978 resulted in the formal proposal of the District of Columbia Voting Rights Amendment. But that amendment expired in 1985, 22 ratifications short of the needed 38.

1980s–2015 Edit

 
D.C. Statehood Now! flag at the 2013 presidential inauguration

Before the D.C. Voting Rights Amendment failed, but when passage seemed unlikely, District voters finally began to pursue statehood. In 1980, former Paulist priest and founder of the Community for Creative Non-Violence, J. Edward Guinan, put statehood on the ballot as an initiative.[17] District voters approved the call of a constitutional convention to draft a proposed state constitution,[18] just as U.S. territories had done prior to their admission as states. The convention was held from February through April 1982.[19] The proposed constitution was ratified by District voters in 1982 for a new state to be called "New Columbia".[20] In 1987, another state constitution[21] was drafted, which again referred to the proposed state as New Columbia. Since the 98th Congress, more than a dozen statehood bills have been introduced, with two bills being reported out of the committee of jurisdictions.[22] The second of these bills made it to the House floor in November 1993, for the only floor debate and vote on D.C. statehood. It was defeated in the House of Representatives by 277–153.

Under the 1980 proposed state constitution, the district still selects members of a shadow congressional delegation, consisting of two shadow senators and a shadow representative, to lobby the Congress to grant statehood. Congress does not officially recognize these positions. Additionally, until May 2008, Congress prohibited the district from spending any funds on lobbying for voting representation or statehood.[23]

Since the 1993 vote, bills to grant statehood to the district have been introduced in Congress each year but have not been brought to a vote.[24] Following a 2012 statehood referendum in the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico, political commentators endorsed the idea of admitting both the District and Puerto Rico into the Union.[25][26]

In July 2014, President Barack Obama became the second sitting president, after Bill Clinton in 1993, to endorse statehood for the District of Columbia. Asked about his opinion on statehood in a town-hall event, he said, "I'm in D.C., so I'm for it ... Folks in D.C. pay taxes like everybody else ... They contribute to the overall well-being of the country like everybody else. They should be represented like everybody else. And it's not as if Washington, D.C., is not big enough compared to other states. There has been a long movement to get D.C. statehood and I've been for it for quite some time. The politics of it end up being difficult to get it through Congress, but I think it's absolutely the right thing to do."[27][28] D.C. residents now pay more in taxes than 22 states.[29]

There were no congressional hearings on D.C. statehood for more than 20 years following the 1993 floor vote. But on September 15, 2014, the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs held a hearing on bill S. 132, which would have created a new state out of the current District of Columbia, similar to the 1993 bill.[30]

On December 4, 2015, the District of Columbia was granted membership in the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, an advocacy group for people groups and territories which do not receive full representation in the government of the state in which they reside.[31]

2016 statehood referendum Edit

2016 Washington, D.C. statehood referendum
November 8, 2016; 6 years ago (2016-11-08)
Voting systemsimple majority
Shall the voters of the District of Columbia advise the Council to approve or reject this proposal?
Approve
85.83%
Reject
14.17%

On April 15, 2016, District Mayor Muriel Bowser called for a districtwide vote on whether the nation's capital should become the 51st state.[32] This was followed by the release of a proposed state constitution.[33] This constitution would make the Mayor of the District of Columbia the governor of the proposed state, while the members of the District Council would make up the proposed House of Delegates. While "New Columbia" has long been associated with the movement, community members thought other names, such as Potomac or Douglass, were more appropriate for the area.[34]

On November 8, 2016, the voters of the District of Columbia voted overwhelmingly in favor of statehood, with 86% of voters voting to advise approving the proposal.[35] Although the proposed state name on the ballot sent to voters appeared as "State of New Columbia", the resolution passed by the D.C. District Council passed in October 2016, weeks before the election, changed the name to "State of Washington, D.C.", in which "D.C." stands for "Douglass Commonwealth", a reference to African-American abolitionist Frederick Douglass, who lived in Washington, D.C. from 1877 to 1895.[36]

D.C. Admission Act (H.R. 51) Edit

In March 2017, the District's congressional delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton introduced the Washington, D.C. Admission Act to propose D.C. statehood in the U.S. House of Representatives.[37] In May 2017, the Act was introduced in the U.S. Senate.[38] These efforts were supported by the activist coalition, 51 for 51.[39]

In February 2019, the House Democratic leadership put its support behind legislation to grant D.C. statehood.[40] H.R. 1, the For the People Act of 2019, included a nonbinding expression of support, passed 234 to 193 in March 2019 on a party-line vote, with Democrats in favor and Republicans opposed.[41]

The George Floyd protests in June 2020 brought attention to situations of racial injustice and President Trump's controversial use of the D.C. National Guard (among other forces) to clear protesters from near the White House angered the city government,[42] which, unlike the states in the United States, does not directly control its National Guard. On June 26, 2020, the House of Representatives passed the "Washington, D.C. Admission Act" 232–180 largely along party lines; Collin Peterson and Justin Amash were the only Democrat and Libertarian, respectively, to vote no.[43] It died in the Republican-controlled Senate at the end of the 116th Congress.[44][45] On January 4, 2021, Delegate Norton reintroduced H.R. 51 early in the 117th Congress with a record 202 co-sponsors.[46][47]

The Washington, D.C. Admission Act would create the state of "Washington, Douglass Commonwealth" (named after Frederick Douglass). As a state, the Douglass Commonwealth would receive two senators and one representative in the House of Representatives based on population.[42] The admission act would carve out a smaller federal district, dubbed "the Capital"; this would consist of the White House, U.S. Capitol, other federal buildings, the National Mall, and its monuments.[42][41] The bill included a section creating faster procedures for repealing the Twenty-third Amendment, which grants the district three electoral votes in presidential elections. The bill also repeals Section 21, Title 3 of the US Code, dealing with presidential elections, which for the purposes of the election of the President and Vice President, "State" includes the District of Columbia. Were the Twenty-third Amendment not to be repealed, the small district remaining as the seat of government would retain three Electoral College votes; Congress would need to legislate a means of appointing electors, as the amendment requires,[48] with one possibility being awarding them to the winner of the popular vote. On April 14, 2021, the United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform voted to pass the bill, paving the way for the House of Representatives to vote on the bill.[49] The House passed the bill on April 22 with a vote of 216–208.[50]

S. 51 Edit

On January 26, 2021, Tom Carper of Delaware introduced a similar bill, S. 51, "A bill to provide for the admission of the State of Washington, D.C. into the Union" into the United States Senate with a record 38 co-sponsors.[51][52] Additional co-sponsors signed on, totaling 45 by April 17, all of whom are Democrats or Independents.[53]

Resolution 146 in State Nebraska Edit

Resolution 146, introduced by Lincoln State Senators Danielle Conrad and George Dungan, would urge Nebraska's congressional delegation to support statehood for the nation's capital if passed by the entire legislature. It would be a non-binding encouragement for US representatives.[1].

Arguments for Edit

Right to govern Edit

Advocates of statehood and voting representation for the District of Columbia argue that as U.S. citizens, the District's estimated 706,000 residents[54] (more than Wyoming and Vermont) should have the same right to determine how they are governed as citizens of a state. At least as early as 1776, George Mason wrote in the Virginia Declaration of Rights:

VI. That elections of members to serve as representatives of the people, in assembly, ought to be free; and that all men, having sufficient evidence of permanent common interest with, and attachment to, the community, have the right of suffrage, and cannot be taxed or deprived of their property for public uses without their own consent, or that of their representatives so elected, nor bound by any law to which they have not, in like manner, assented, for the public good.

VII. That all power of suspending laws, or the execution of laws, by any authority without consent of the representatives of the people, is injurious to their rights, and ought not to be exercised.[55]

Under the constitution, Congress has exclusive power to oversee D.C, which has led to tension in how D.C. appropriates its budget and responds to emergencies. In 2016 Congress rejected an attempt by D.C. to gain full control of its budget, which Congress has historically overseen.[56] Muriel Bowser has also argued that D.C. statehood might have resulted in a swifter response to the January 6 United States Capitol attack since state governors have the power to mobilize their National Guard units.[57]

Civil and human rights Edit

The district's lack of voting representation in Congress has led to the debate on the status of the civil rights of those living there. The Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, which allows U.S. citizens to vote absentee for their home state's Congressional representatives from anywhere else in the world, does not apply if a U.S. citizen were to move to the district, meaning those that move to or reside in the area permanently do not have voting representation in Congress.

Since 2006, the United Nations Human Rights Committee report has cited the United States for denying D.C. residents voting rights in alleged violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a treaty the United States ratified in 1992.[58] In 2015, D.C. became a member of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization.[59]

Boston Globe commentator Abdallah Fayyad called anti-statehood arguments "racist", targeting the district's high African-American population.[60] Fayyad noted opponents often implied that Black people couldn't be trusted to govern themselves, for example when they pointed to crime and government corruption despite the same problems in states. A report by the Gender Equity Policy Institute (GEPI) details how the system of taxation without full representation for the district's residents disproportionately affects people of color and women.[61]

Tax arguments Edit

Unlike residents of U.S. territories such as Puerto Rico or Guam, which also have non-voting delegates, citizens of the District of Columbia are subject to all U.S. federal taxes.[62] In the financial year 2007, D.C. residents and businesses paid $20.4 billion in federal taxes; more than the taxes collected from 19 states and the highest federal taxes per capita.[63] This situation has given rise to the use of the phrase "End Taxation Without Representation" by those in favor of granting D.C. voting representation in the Congress. Since November 2000, the standard Washington, D.C. vehicle license plate has featured some form of the slogan.

In November 2000, the D.C. Department of Motor Vehicles began issuing license plates bearing the slogan "Taxation without representation".[64] President Bill Clinton had these plates placed on the presidential limousines shortly before the end of his second term. However, President George W. Bush, in one of his first official acts as president, had the plates removed.[65] The usage of "taxation without representation" plates was restored by President Barack Obama shortly before his second-term inauguration.[66] President Donald Trump continued to use the plates, though he stated he had "no position" regarding statehood or representation for the district.[67] However, in an interview in 2020, Trump said D.C. statehood would "never happen."[68]

Arguments against Edit

National capital should be independent from state control Edit

Before the District's founding, James Madison argued in Federalist No. 43 that the national capital needed to be distinct from the states to provide for its own maintenance and safety. He wrote, "a dependence of the members of the general government on the State comprehending the seat of the government, for protection in the exercise of their duty, might bring on the national councils an imputation of awe or influence, equally dishonorable to the government and dissatisfactory to the other members of the Confederacy."[11]

Shrunken capital would give the President too much power in elections Edit

The proposed statehood movements address concerns that the national capital should be independent of the states by reserving an independent enclave for the federal government buildings.[69] Specifically, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, the statehood legislation supported by the district government since 2017, carves out an enclave within the proposed state known as "The Capital" to act as the new federal district; this Capital would encompass the White House, Capitol Building, Supreme Court Building, and other major federal offices.[69] However, the D.C. Admission Act would not affect the Twenty-third Amendment to the Constitution, which requires that the U.S. capital "shall appoint" at least three members of the Electoral College even though it is not a state. The text of the amendment says that the capital shall choose its electors "in such manner as the Congress may direct"; while the District of Columbia currently chooses its electors based on the Election Day popular vote for president,[70] this is not required by the amendment.[71]

Critics such as Hewitt Pate of the Heritage Foundation have argued that the continuation of the 23rd Amendment would create an absurd result because the Presidential family would be among only 30–50 people living in the smaller Capital, giving them a disproportionate influence on the Capital's three electoral votes and thus on the President's election or reelection.[48][72][73] The D.C. Admission Act attempts to address this issue by repealing the congressionally established laws that control how the District of Columbia chooses its Electoral College members, but the Congressional Research Service has concluded that even with this provision, courts would likely find that the 23rd Amendment still grants three electoral votes to the smaller Capital.[74]

In addition, the D.C. Admission Act would require Congress to quickly take up the issue of repealing the 23rd Amendment.[69]: 34–40  However, actual repeal of the amendment itself would still require approval by three-quarters of the states after the proposed repealing amendment is approved by Congress, as required by Article V of the Constitution.

Alternative proposals to statehood Edit

Alternative proposals to statehood have been proposed to grant the district varying degrees of greater political autonomy and voting representation in Congress. Most proposals generally involve treating the District of Columbia more like a state or allowing Maryland to take back the land it donated to form the district.

Retrocession Edit

In a process known as retrocession, jurisdiction over the District of Columbia could be returned to Maryland or given to Virginia, possibly excluding a small tract of land immediately surrounding the United States Capitol, the White House and the Supreme Court building.[75] This would require agreement between Congress and the Maryland General Assembly or Virginia General Assembly. If the district were returned to Maryland or given to Virginia, District residents would gain voting representation in Congress as residents of Maryland or Virginia.[72][76] Retrocession could also alter the idea of a separate national capital as envisioned by the Founding Fathers.[11] However, retrocession is unpopular among D.C. residents.[77][better source needed] In addition, the exclusion of small tracts of land as a rump District of Columbia, under any retrocession proposals, would also give the minimal number of people who live on those lands (possibly just those living at the White House) three electoral votes in any U.S. presidential elections, if the 23rd Amendment is not repealed.[citation needed]

A proposal related to retrocession was the "District of Columbia Voting Rights Restoration Act of 2004" (H.R. 3709), which would have treated district residents as Maryland residents for congressional representation. Maryland's congressional delegation would then be apportioned accordingly to include the district's population.[78] Those in favor of such a plan argue that the Congress already has the necessary authority to pass such legislation without the constitutional concerns of other proposed remedies. From the foundation of the District in 1790 until the passage of the Organic Act of 1801, citizens living in the District of Columbia continued to vote for members of Congress in Maryland or Virginia; legal scholars, therefore, propose that the Congress has the power to restore those voting rights while maintaining the integrity of the federal district.[79] However, the proposed legislation never made it out of committee and would not grant the district any additional authority over its local affairs.[78]

Voting rights reforms Edit

Several bills have been introduced in Congress to grant the District of Columbia voting representation in one or both houses of Congress. The primary issue with all legislative proposals is whether Congress has the constitutional authority to grant the district voting representation. Members of Congress in support of the bills claim that constitutional concerns should not prohibit the legislation's passage but should be left to the courts.[80] A secondary criticism of a legislative remedy is that any law granting representation to the district could be undone in the future. Additionally, recent legislative proposals deal with granting representation in the House of Representatives only, which would still leave the issue of Senate representation for District residents unresolved.[81] Since the D.C. Voting Rights Amendment was proposed in 1978, no bill granting the district voting representation has successfully passed both houses of Congress, though the District of Columbia House Voting Rights Act of 2009 did pass in the Senate in 2009. If a bill were to pass, the law would not grant the district any additional authority over its local affairs.

Political support and opposition Edit

Civil rights, religious, labor, business, and civic organizations Edit

Religious groups supporting D.C. statehood include the American Jewish Committee, the Episcopal Church,[82] the Union for Reform Judaism, United Church of Christ, United Methodist Church General Board of Church and Society, the Catholic Social Justice Lobby,[83] and the Unitarian Universalist Association.[84] On June 22, 2021, statehood was endorsed by over 300 religious leaders, including James Winkler, head of the National Council of Churches.[85]

According to the Commission for Statehood, an office of the Government of the District of Columbia, D.C. statehood is supported by American University, Georgetown University, the League of Women Voters, the National Bar Association, the American Civil Liberties Union, the AFL–CIO, the American Federation of Teachers, the Human Rights Campaign, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, the NAACP, the National Education Association, the National Treasury Employees Union, the National Urban League, SEIU, the Sierra Club, the Union of Concerned Scientists, Iowans for D.C. Statehood (a grassroots non-partisan organization dedicated to educating and engaging the citizens of Iowa in the District of Columbia statehood movement).[86], and many others.[87]

A July 22, 2021 letter to President Biden calling for support of voting rights and DC statehood prepared by the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights was signed by 150 organizations including the Children's Defense Fund, Common Cause, the National Association of Social Workers, the Natural Resources Defense Council, the National Organization for Women, and the Communications Workers of America.[88]

In March 2021, the Federal City Council, a consortium of Washington business and civic leaders that promotes economic development in the District of Columbia, launched a research organization, Statehood Research DC, to provide the historical, economic, and legal details of making the District of Columbia a state.[89]

District of Columbia political parties Edit

Statehood is supported by the D.C. Democratic Party,[90] the Libertarian Party of the District of Columbia,[91] and the D.C. Statehood Green Party.[92] The D.C. Republican Party platform says "The District of Columbia must either become a state or its residents must be exempt from federal income taxes."[93]

Democrats Edit

 
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaking in support of D.C. statehood in 2020.

Democratic presidents and presidential nominees since Bill Clinton have supported statehood, including former President Barack Obama, 2016 nominee Hillary Clinton and incumbent President Joe Biden.[94][95][96] The Democratic party national platform included support for statehood again starting in 2016, having been previously removed from the platform from 2004 to 2012.[97]

From the 1993 statehood failure through the failure of the 2009 House Voting Rights Act, neither statehood nor retrocession was a legislative priority by either party.[98][99] In 2014, Maryland's senators, both Democrats, co-sponsored a D.C. statehood bill.[98][99]

In May 2017, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act was introduced in the U.S. Senate, which led to the first hearings on the subject in years.[38] In February 2019, the House Democratic leadership put its support behind legislation to grant D.C. statehood.[40] Bill H.R. 1, which included a nonbinding expression of support, passed 234 to 193 in March 2019.[41] In 2020 and 2021, the full House of Representatives voted on statehood bills, both approved on party-line votes with Democrats in support and Republicans in opposition.[100]

On April 30, 2021, Democratic senator Joe Manchin came out against both H.R. 51 and S. 51, effectively dooming their passage.[101]

Republicans Edit

The national Republican Party opposes statehood and believes a constitutional amendment would be required for the district to become a state. The 2016 Republican party platform stated: "Statehood for the District can be advanced only by a constitutional amendment. Any other approach would be invalid."[102]

Congressional Republicans have strongly opposed statehood bills that attempt to make the district a state without amending the Constitution first, characterizing congressional Democrats' attempts to pass statehood through as legislation as an "unconstitutional power grab to gain two progressive Senate seats".[103] Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has called D.C. statehood "full bore socialism" and promised to object to any statehood push in the Senate.[104][105][106]

The D.C. Republican Party platform says, "The District of Columbia must either become a state or its residents must be exempt from federal income taxes."[107]

Polling Edit

Area
polled
Segment
polled
Polling firm Date Approve Disapprove Unsure/
No opinion
Sample
size
Polling
method
Source(s)
United
States
Adult Citizens The EconomistYouGov December 17–20, 2022 41% 36% 23% 1,500 online [108]
Registered voters RMG Research – Rasmussen Reports March 18–20, 2021 35% 41% 24% 1,200 online [109]
Likely voters Data for Progress February 19–22, 2021 54% 35% 11% 1,526 online [110]
All adults FortuneSurveyMonkey January 11–12, 2021 49% 45% 6% 2,554 online [111]
Likely voters The New York Times/Siena September 22–24, 2020 59% 26% 15% 950 telephone [112]
Registered voters Data for Progress August 26–September 1, 2020 43% 34% 23% 1,025 online [113]
Registered voters Lake Research Partners August 10–14, 2020 49% 22% 29% 940 online [114]
Registered voters The Hill and HarrisX June 22–23, 2020 48% 52% 951 online [115]
All adults Gallup June 19–30, 2019 29% 64% 8% 1,018 telephone [116]
Registered voters Data for Progress January 25–29, 2019 35% 28% 37% 1,282 online [117]
All adults YouGov September 18–19, 2014 27% 49% 24% 997 online [118]

  majority approve   plurality approve   majority disapprove   plurality disapprove   plurality unsure or have no opinion

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Change in Resident Population of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico: 1910 to 2020" (PDF). Census.gov. United States Census Bureau. (PDF) from the original on April 26, 2021. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  2. ^ "Population density in the U.S. by federal states including the District of Columbia in 2020". Statista. 2020.
  3. ^ "United States Summary: 2010, Population and Housing Unit Counts, 2010 Census of Population and Housing" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. September 2012. pp. V–2, 1 & 41 (Tables 1 & 18). Retrieved February 7, 2014.
  4. ^ "GDP by State". GDP by State | U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). Bureau of Economic Analysis. Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  5. ^ "Per capita Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the United States in 2019, by state(in chained 2012 U.S. dollars)". Statista. 2019.
  6. ^ "S1901: INCOME IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS (IN 2018 INFLATION-ADJUSTED DOLLARS)". data.census.gov. December 19, 2019. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  7. ^ "Sub-national HDI – Area Database – Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  8. ^ "D.C. Law Library – Subchapter II. Statehood" (PDF). Council of the District of Columbia. March 10, 1981. from the original on February 18, 2018. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  9. ^ Norton, Eleanor Holmes (January 3, 2019). "H.R.51 – 116th Congress (2019–2020): Washington, D.C. Admission Act". United States Congress. from the original on September 20, 2019. Retrieved September 19, 2019.
  10. ^ District of Columbia House Voting Rights Act of 2007: Hearing Notes. DIANE publishing. March 14, 2007. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-4223-2085-3.
  11. ^ a b c Madison, James (April 30, 1996). "The Federalist No. 43". The Independent Journal. Library of Congress. from the original on September 14, 2013. Retrieved May 31, 2008.
  12. ^ a b Forbes-Lindsay, C. H. (1908). (PDF). Philadelphia: The John C. Winston Co. p. 110. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 17, 2015. Retrieved November 16, 2015.
  13. ^ (PDF). American Bar Association. September 14, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 25, 2008. Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  14. ^ Woodward, Augustus (1801). Considerations on the government of the Territory of Columbia: as they appeared in the National intelligencer. Washington, DC: Samuel Harrison Smith.
  15. ^ Hatch, Orrin (January 1, 1978). "Should the Capital Vote in Congress? A Critical Analysis of the Proposed D.C. Representation Amendment". Fordham Urban Law Journal. 7 (3): 479–539. from the original on September 28, 2020. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
  16. ^ Congressional Record, 1805: 979–980.
  17. ^ Chris Myers Asch, Derek Musgrove (2017). Chocolate City: A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation's Capital. Chapel Hill NC: UNC Press Books. p. 417. ISBN 9781469635873. from the original on April 24, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  18. ^ "Guide to the District of Columbia Statehood Constitutional Convention Records, 1982". Library.gwu.edu. George Washington University. from the original on November 19, 2016. Retrieved July 7, 2016.
  19. ^ "DC Statehood Constitutional Convention Transcript, from George Washington University Libraries DC Statehood Constitutional Convention Records". archive.org. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
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External links Edit

  • District of Columbia Statehood movement official website
  • Statehood Research DC
  • DC Vote
  • 51 for 51
  • DC Statehood Coalition
  • Neighbors United for DC Statehood
  • Musgrove, George Derek (2017). "'Statehood is Far More Difficult': The Struggle for D.C. Self-Determination, 1980–2017". Washington History. 29 (2): 3–17. hdl:11603/18649. JSTOR 90015019.
  • Samuels, Joel H. (1993). "DC Statehood: Its Time Has Come". Helvedius. 5 (1): 23–24. doi:10.7916/D8FJ2DSM.
  • Schleicher, David (January 1, 2014). "Welcome to New Columbia: The Fiscal, Economic and Political Consequences of Statehood for D.C." Faculty Scholarship Series.

district, columbia, statehood, movement, this, article, about, movement, statehood, district, columbia, political, party, statehood, green, party, columbia, redirects, here, other, uses, columbia, disambiguation, political, movement, that, advocates, making, d. This article is about the movement for statehood of the District of Columbia For the political party see D C Statehood Green Party New Columbia redirects here For other uses see New Columbia disambiguation The District of Columbia statehood movement is a political movement that advocates making the District of Columbia a U S state to provide the residents of the District of Columbia with voting representation in the Congress and complete control over local affairs The Flag of the District of ColumbiaA protest variant of the flag from 2002Since its establishment by the District Clause in Article I Section 8 Clause 17 of the United States Constitution the District of Columbia has been a federal district under the exclusive legislative jurisdiction of the United States Congress It is currently debated whether the District of Columbia could be made a state by an act of Congress or whether it would require a constitutional amendment Alternative proposals to statehood include the retrocession of the District of Columbia and voting rights reforms If the District of Columbia were to become a state it would be the first state admitted to the union since 1959 As a state it would rank 49th by population as of 2020 ahead of Vermont and Wyoming 1 1st in population density as of 2020 at 11 685 people square mile compared to the next densest state New Jersey with 1 207 people square mile 2 51st by area 3 34th by GDP as of 2020 4 1st by GDP per capita as of 2019 at 177 442 it is nearly 2 4 times the next state Massachusetts at 75 258 5 1st in educational attainment in 2018 with 59 7 of residents having a bachelor s degree and 34 0 having an advanced degree 6 and 6th in terms of Human Development Index as of 2018 7 For most of the modern 1980 present statehood movement the new state s name would have been the State of New Columbia although the Washington D C Admission Act passed by the United States House of Representatives in 2020 and 2021 refers to the proposed state as the State of Washington Douglass Commonwealth in honor of George Washington and Frederick Douglass 8 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 District Clause of the Constitution 1 2 Early discussions of voting rights 1 3 Late 19th and early 20th centuries 1 4 Civil rights era and the Twenty third Amendment 1950s 1970s 1 5 1980s 2015 1 6 2016 statehood referendum 1 7 D C Admission Act H R 51 1 7 1 S 51 1 8 Resolution 146 in State Nebraska 2 Arguments for 2 1 Right to govern 2 2 Civil and human rights 2 3 Tax arguments 3 Arguments against 3 1 National capital should be independent from state control 3 2 Shrunken capital would give the President too much power in elections 4 Alternative proposals to statehood 4 1 Retrocession 4 2 Voting rights reforms 5 Political support and opposition 5 1 Civil rights religious labor business and civic organizations 5 2 District of Columbia political parties 5 3 Democrats 5 4 Republicans 5 5 Polling 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit nbsp The U S Army Institute of Heraldry has designed this 51 star version of the national flag for use if a 51st state is admitted into the Union District Clause of the Constitution Edit In the late 18th century several individuals believed that Congress needed control over the national capital This belief resulted in the creation of a national capital separate from any state by the Constitution s District Clause with a maximum area of 100 square miles 260 km2 64 000 acres 26 000 ha i e based on a square where the sides are no more than ten miles long 10 The District Clause in Article I Section 8 Clause 17 of the United States Constitution states The Congress shall have Power To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever over such District not exceeding ten miles square as may by cession of particular states and the acceptance of Congress become the seat of the government of the United States In support of the creation of the District of Columbia Madison wrote in Federalist No 43 that the residents of the new federal district will have had their voice in the election of the government which is to exercise authority over them 11 Madison did not elaborate as to how this would be but even with a then unidentified parcel suggested that the principles of self government would not be absent in the capital of the Republic Early discussions of voting rights Edit In 1788 the land on which the district was formed was ceded by Maryland In 1790 Congress passed the Residence Act placing the district on the Potomac River between the Anacostia and Connogochegue with the exact location chosen by President George Washington His selection was announced on January 24 1791 and the Residence Act was amended to include land that Virginia had ceded in 1790 That land was returned to Virginia in 1847 The Congress did not officially move to the new federal capital until the first Monday in December 1800 During that time the district was governed by a combination of a federally appointed board of commissioners the state legislatures and locally elected governments 12 Within a year of moving to the district Congress passed the District of Columbia Organic Act of 1801 and incorporated the new federal district under its sole authority as permitted by the District Clause Since the District of Columbia was no longer part of any state the district s residents lost voting representation in Congress and the Electoral College and a voice in Constitutional Amendments and the right to home rule facts that did not go without protest 13 In January 1801 a meeting of district citizens was held which resulted in a statement to Congress commenting that as a result of the impending Organic Act we shall be completely disfranchised in respect to the national government while we retain no security for participating in the formation of even the most minute local regulations by which we are to be affected We shall be reduced to that deprecated condition of which we pathetically complained in our charges against Great Britain of being taxed without representation 12 Talk of suffrage for the District of Columbia began almost immediately though it mostly focused on constitutional amendments and retrocession not statehood In 1801 Augustus Woodward writing under the name Epaminondas wrote a series of newspaper articles in the National Intelligencer proposing a constitutional amendment that would read The Territory of Columbia shall be entitled to one Senator in the Senate of the United States and to a number of members in the House of Representatives proportionate to its population 14 Since then more than 150 constitutional amendments and bills have been introduced to provide representation to the District of Columbia resulting in congressional hearings on more than twenty occasions with the first of those hearings in 1803 15 At that time resolutions were introduced by Congress to retrocede most of District of Columbia to Maryland Citizens fearful that the seat of government be moved asked that D C be given a territorial government and an amendment to the Constitution for equal rights But James Holland of North Carolina argued that creating a territorial government would leave citizens dissatisfied He said the next step will be a request to be admitted as a member of the Union and if you pursue the practice relative to territories you must so soon as their numbers will authorize it admit them into the Union 16 Late 19th and early 20th centuries Edit The first proposal for congressional representation to get serious consideration came in 1888 but it would not be until 1921 that Congress would hold hearings on the subject Those hearings resulted in the first bill introduced by Sen Wesley Livsey Jones R WA to be reported out of committee that would have addressed District representation The bill would have enabled though not required Congress to treat residents of D C as though they were citizens of a state Civil rights era and the Twenty third Amendment 1950s 1970s Edit Congressional members continued to propose amendments to address the District s lack of representation with efforts picking up as part of the Civil rights movement in the late 1950s This eventually resulted in the successful passage of the Twenty third Amendment in 1961 which granted the district votes in the Electoral College in proportion to their size as if they were a state but no more than the least populous state D C citizens have exercised this right since the presidential election of 1964 With District citizens still denied full suffrage members continued to propose bills to address congressional representation Such bills made it out of committee in 1967 and 1972 to a House floor for a vote in 1976 and in 1978 resulted in the formal proposal of the District of Columbia Voting Rights Amendment But that amendment expired in 1985 22 ratifications short of the needed 38 1980s 2015 Edit nbsp D C Statehood Now flag at the 2013 presidential inaugurationBefore the D C Voting Rights Amendment failed but when passage seemed unlikely District voters finally began to pursue statehood In 1980 former Paulist priest and founder of the Community for Creative Non Violence J Edward Guinan put statehood on the ballot as an initiative 17 District voters approved the call of a constitutional convention to draft a proposed state constitution 18 just as U S territories had done prior to their admission as states The convention was held from February through April 1982 19 The proposed constitution was ratified by District voters in 1982 for a new state to be called New Columbia 20 In 1987 another state constitution 21 was drafted which again referred to the proposed state as New Columbia Since the 98th Congress more than a dozen statehood bills have been introduced with two bills being reported out of the committee of jurisdictions 22 The second of these bills made it to the House floor in November 1993 for the only floor debate and vote on D C statehood It was defeated in the House of Representatives by 277 153 Under the 1980 proposed state constitution the district still selects members of a shadow congressional delegation consisting of two shadow senators and a shadow representative to lobby the Congress to grant statehood Congress does not officially recognize these positions Additionally until May 2008 Congress prohibited the district from spending any funds on lobbying for voting representation or statehood 23 Since the 1993 vote bills to grant statehood to the district have been introduced in Congress each year but have not been brought to a vote 24 Following a 2012 statehood referendum in the U S territory of Puerto Rico political commentators endorsed the idea of admitting both the District and Puerto Rico into the Union 25 26 In July 2014 President Barack Obama became the second sitting president after Bill Clinton in 1993 to endorse statehood for the District of Columbia Asked about his opinion on statehood in a town hall event he said I m in D C so I m for it Folks in D C pay taxes like everybody else They contribute to the overall well being of the country like everybody else They should be represented like everybody else And it s not as if Washington D C is not big enough compared to other states There has been a long movement to get D C statehood and I ve been for it for quite some time The politics of it end up being difficult to get it through Congress but I think it s absolutely the right thing to do 27 28 D C residents now pay more in taxes than 22 states 29 There were no congressional hearings on D C statehood for more than 20 years following the 1993 floor vote But on September 15 2014 the U S Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs held a hearing on bill S 132 which would have created a new state out of the current District of Columbia similar to the 1993 bill 30 On December 4 2015 the District of Columbia was granted membership in the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization an advocacy group for people groups and territories which do not receive full representation in the government of the state in which they reside 31 2016 statehood referendum Edit 2016 Washington D C statehood referendumNovember 8 2016 6 years ago 2016 11 08 Voting systemsimple majorityShall the voters of the District of Columbia advise the Council to approve or reject this proposal Approve 85 83 Reject 14 17 Main article 2016 Washington D C statehood referendum On April 15 2016 District Mayor Muriel Bowser called for a districtwide vote on whether the nation s capital should become the 51st state 32 This was followed by the release of a proposed state constitution 33 This constitution would make the Mayor of the District of Columbia the governor of the proposed state while the members of the District Council would make up the proposed House of Delegates While New Columbia has long been associated with the movement community members thought other names such as Potomac or Douglass were more appropriate for the area 34 On November 8 2016 the voters of the District of Columbia voted overwhelmingly in favor of statehood with 86 of voters voting to advise approving the proposal 35 Although the proposed state name on the ballot sent to voters appeared as State of New Columbia the resolution passed by the D C District Council passed in October 2016 weeks before the election changed the name to State of Washington D C in which D C stands for Douglass Commonwealth a reference to African American abolitionist Frederick Douglass who lived in Washington D C from 1877 to 1895 36 D C Admission Act H R 51 Edit Main article Washington D C Admission Act In March 2017 the District s congressional delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton introduced the Washington D C Admission Act to propose D C statehood in the U S House of Representatives 37 In May 2017 the Act was introduced in the U S Senate 38 These efforts were supported by the activist coalition 51 for 51 39 In February 2019 the House Democratic leadership put its support behind legislation to grant D C statehood 40 H R 1 the For the People Act of 2019 included a nonbinding expression of support passed 234 to 193 in March 2019 on a party line vote with Democrats in favor and Republicans opposed 41 The George Floyd protests in June 2020 brought attention to situations of racial injustice and President Trump s controversial use of the D C National Guard among other forces to clear protesters from near the White House angered the city government 42 which unlike the states in the United States does not directly control its National Guard On June 26 2020 the House of Representatives passed the Washington D C Admission Act 232 180 largely along party lines Collin Peterson and Justin Amash were the only Democrat and Libertarian respectively to vote no 43 It died in the Republican controlled Senate at the end of the 116th Congress 44 45 On January 4 2021 Delegate Norton reintroduced H R 51 early in the 117th Congress with a record 202 co sponsors 46 47 The Washington D C Admission Act would create the state of Washington Douglass Commonwealth named after Frederick Douglass As a state the Douglass Commonwealth would receive two senators and one representative in the House of Representatives based on population 42 The admission act would carve out a smaller federal district dubbed the Capital this would consist of the White House U S Capitol other federal buildings the National Mall and its monuments 42 41 The bill included a section creating faster procedures for repealing the Twenty third Amendment which grants the district three electoral votes in presidential elections The bill also repeals Section 21 Title 3 of the US Code dealing with presidential elections which for the purposes of the election of the President and Vice President State includes the District of Columbia Were the Twenty third Amendment not to be repealed the small district remaining as the seat of government would retain three Electoral College votes Congress would need to legislate a means of appointing electors as the amendment requires 48 with one possibility being awarding them to the winner of the popular vote On April 14 2021 the United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform voted to pass the bill paving the way for the House of Representatives to vote on the bill 49 The House passed the bill on April 22 with a vote of 216 208 50 S 51 Edit On January 26 2021 Tom Carper of Delaware introduced a similar bill S 51 A bill to provide for the admission of the State of Washington D C into the Union into the United States Senate with a record 38 co sponsors 51 52 Additional co sponsors signed on totaling 45 by April 17 all of whom are Democrats or Independents 53 Resolution 146 in State Nebraska Edit Resolution 146 introduced by Lincoln State Senators Danielle Conrad and George Dungan would urge Nebraska s congressional delegation to support statehood for the nation s capital if passed by the entire legislature It would be a non binding encouragement for US representatives 1 Arguments for EditRight to govern Edit Advocates of statehood and voting representation for the District of Columbia argue that as U S citizens the District s estimated 706 000 residents 54 more than Wyoming and Vermont should have the same right to determine how they are governed as citizens of a state At least as early as 1776 George Mason wrote in the Virginia Declaration of Rights VI That elections of members to serve as representatives of the people in assembly ought to be free and that all men having sufficient evidence of permanent common interest with and attachment to the community have the right of suffrage and cannot be taxed or deprived of their property for public uses without their own consent or that of their representatives so elected nor bound by any law to which they have not in like manner assented for the public good VII That all power of suspending laws or the execution of laws by any authority without consent of the representatives of the people is injurious to their rights and ought not to be exercised 55 Under the constitution Congress has exclusive power to oversee D C which has led to tension in how D C appropriates its budget and responds to emergencies In 2016 Congress rejected an attempt by D C to gain full control of its budget which Congress has historically overseen 56 Muriel Bowser has also argued that D C statehood might have resulted in a swifter response to the January 6 United States Capitol attack since state governors have the power to mobilize their National Guard units 57 Civil and human rights Edit The district s lack of voting representation in Congress has led to the debate on the status of the civil rights of those living there The Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act which allows U S citizens to vote absentee for their home state s Congressional representatives from anywhere else in the world does not apply if a U S citizen were to move to the district meaning those that move to or reside in the area permanently do not have voting representation in Congress Since 2006 the United Nations Human Rights Committee report has cited the United States for denying D C residents voting rights in alleged violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights a treaty the United States ratified in 1992 58 In 2015 D C became a member of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization 59 Boston Globe commentator Abdallah Fayyad called anti statehood arguments racist targeting the district s high African American population 60 Fayyad noted opponents often implied that Black people couldn t be trusted to govern themselves for example when they pointed to crime and government corruption despite the same problems in states A report by the Gender Equity Policy Institute GEPI details how the system of taxation without full representation for the district s residents disproportionately affects people of color and women 61 Tax arguments Edit Unlike residents of U S territories such as Puerto Rico or Guam which also have non voting delegates citizens of the District of Columbia are subject to all U S federal taxes 62 In the financial year 2007 D C residents and businesses paid 20 4 billion in federal taxes more than the taxes collected from 19 states and the highest federal taxes per capita 63 This situation has given rise to the use of the phrase End Taxation Without Representation by those in favor of granting D C voting representation in the Congress Since November 2000 the standard Washington D C vehicle license plate has featured some form of the slogan In November 2000 the D C Department of Motor Vehicles began issuing license plates bearing the slogan Taxation without representation 64 President Bill Clinton had these plates placed on the presidential limousines shortly before the end of his second term However President George W Bush in one of his first official acts as president had the plates removed 65 The usage of taxation without representation plates was restored by President Barack Obama shortly before his second term inauguration 66 President Donald Trump continued to use the plates though he stated he had no position regarding statehood or representation for the district 67 However in an interview in 2020 Trump said D C statehood would never happen 68 Arguments against EditNational capital should be independent from state control Edit Before the District s founding James Madison argued in Federalist No 43 that the national capital needed to be distinct from the states to provide for its own maintenance and safety He wrote a dependence of the members of the general government on the State comprehending the seat of the government for protection in the exercise of their duty might bring on the national councils an imputation of awe or influence equally dishonorable to the government and dissatisfactory to the other members of the Confederacy 11 Shrunken capital would give the President too much power in elections Edit The proposed statehood movements address concerns that the national capital should be independent of the states by reserving an independent enclave for the federal government buildings 69 Specifically the Washington D C Admission Act the statehood legislation supported by the district government since 2017 carves out an enclave within the proposed state known as The Capital to act as the new federal district this Capital would encompass the White House Capitol Building Supreme Court Building and other major federal offices 69 However the D C Admission Act would not affect the Twenty third Amendment to the Constitution which requires that the U S capital shall appoint at least three members of the Electoral College even though it is not a state The text of the amendment says that the capital shall choose its electors in such manner as the Congress may direct while the District of Columbia currently chooses its electors based on the Election Day popular vote for president 70 this is not required by the amendment 71 Critics such as Hewitt Pate of the Heritage Foundation have argued that the continuation of the 23rd Amendment would create an absurd result because the Presidential family would be among only 30 50 people living in the smaller Capital giving them a disproportionate influence on the Capital s three electoral votes and thus on the President s election or reelection 48 72 73 The D C Admission Act attempts to address this issue by repealing the congressionally established laws that control how the District of Columbia chooses its Electoral College members but the Congressional Research Service has concluded that even with this provision courts would likely find that the 23rd Amendment still grants three electoral votes to the smaller Capital 74 In addition the D C Admission Act would require Congress to quickly take up the issue of repealing the 23rd Amendment 69 34 40 However actual repeal of the amendment itself would still require approval by three quarters of the states after the proposed repealing amendment is approved by Congress as required by Article V of the Constitution Alternative proposals to statehood EditAlternative proposals to statehood have been proposed to grant the district varying degrees of greater political autonomy and voting representation in Congress Most proposals generally involve treating the District of Columbia more like a state or allowing Maryland to take back the land it donated to form the district Retrocession Edit Main article District of Columbia retrocession In a process known as retrocession jurisdiction over the District of Columbia could be returned to Maryland or given to Virginia possibly excluding a small tract of land immediately surrounding the United States Capitol the White House and the Supreme Court building 75 This would require agreement between Congress and the Maryland General Assembly or Virginia General Assembly If the district were returned to Maryland or given to Virginia District residents would gain voting representation in Congress as residents of Maryland or Virginia 72 76 Retrocession could also alter the idea of a separate national capital as envisioned by the Founding Fathers 11 However retrocession is unpopular among D C residents 77 better source needed In addition the exclusion of small tracts of land as a rump District of Columbia under any retrocession proposals would also give the minimal number of people who live on those lands possibly just those living at the White House three electoral votes in any U S presidential elections if the 23rd Amendment is not repealed citation needed A proposal related to retrocession was the District of Columbia Voting Rights Restoration Act of 2004 H R 3709 which would have treated district residents as Maryland residents for congressional representation Maryland s congressional delegation would then be apportioned accordingly to include the district s population 78 Those in favor of such a plan argue that the Congress already has the necessary authority to pass such legislation without the constitutional concerns of other proposed remedies From the foundation of the District in 1790 until the passage of the Organic Act of 1801 citizens living in the District of Columbia continued to vote for members of Congress in Maryland or Virginia legal scholars therefore propose that the Congress has the power to restore those voting rights while maintaining the integrity of the federal district 79 However the proposed legislation never made it out of committee and would not grant the district any additional authority over its local affairs 78 Voting rights reforms Edit Main article District of Columbia voting rights Several bills have been introduced in Congress to grant the District of Columbia voting representation in one or both houses of Congress The primary issue with all legislative proposals is whether Congress has the constitutional authority to grant the district voting representation Members of Congress in support of the bills claim that constitutional concerns should not prohibit the legislation s passage but should be left to the courts 80 A secondary criticism of a legislative remedy is that any law granting representation to the district could be undone in the future Additionally recent legislative proposals deal with granting representation in the House of Representatives only which would still leave the issue of Senate representation for District residents unresolved 81 Since the D C Voting Rights Amendment was proposed in 1978 no bill granting the district voting representation has successfully passed both houses of Congress though the District of Columbia House Voting Rights Act of 2009 did pass in the Senate in 2009 If a bill were to pass the law would not grant the district any additional authority over its local affairs Political support and opposition EditCivil rights religious labor business and civic organizations Edit Religious groups supporting D C statehood include the American Jewish Committee the Episcopal Church 82 the Union for Reform Judaism United Church of Christ United Methodist Church General Board of Church and Society the Catholic Social Justice Lobby 83 and the Unitarian Universalist Association 84 On June 22 2021 statehood was endorsed by over 300 religious leaders including James Winkler head of the National Council of Churches 85 According to the Commission for Statehood an office of the Government of the District of Columbia D C statehood is supported by American University Georgetown University the League of Women Voters the National Bar Association the American Civil Liberties Union the AFL CIO the American Federation of Teachers the Human Rights Campaign the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights the NAACP the National Education Association the National Treasury Employees Union the National Urban League SEIU the Sierra Club the Union of Concerned Scientists Iowans for D C Statehood a grassroots non partisan organization dedicated to educating and engaging the citizens of Iowa in the District of Columbia statehood movement 86 and many others 87 A July 22 2021 letter to President Biden calling for support of voting rights and DC statehood prepared by the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights was signed by 150 organizations including the Children s Defense Fund Common Cause the National Association of Social Workers the Natural Resources Defense Council the National Organization for Women and the Communications Workers of America 88 In March 2021 the Federal City Council a consortium of Washington business and civic leaders that promotes economic development in the District of Columbia launched a research organization Statehood Research DC to provide the historical economic and legal details of making the District of Columbia a state 89 District of Columbia political parties Edit Statehood is supported by the D C Democratic Party 90 the Libertarian Party of the District of Columbia 91 and the D C Statehood Green Party 92 The D C Republican Party platform says The District of Columbia must either become a state or its residents must be exempt from federal income taxes 93 Democrats Edit nbsp House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaking in support of D C statehood in 2020 Democratic presidents and presidential nominees since Bill Clinton have supported statehood including former President Barack Obama 2016 nominee Hillary Clinton and incumbent President Joe Biden 94 95 96 The Democratic party national platform included support for statehood again starting in 2016 having been previously removed from the platform from 2004 to 2012 97 From the 1993 statehood failure through the failure of the 2009 House Voting Rights Act neither statehood nor retrocession was a legislative priority by either party 98 99 In 2014 Maryland s senators both Democrats co sponsored a D C statehood bill 98 99 In May 2017 the Washington D C Admission Act was introduced in the U S Senate which led to the first hearings on the subject in years 38 In February 2019 the House Democratic leadership put its support behind legislation to grant D C statehood 40 Bill H R 1 which included a nonbinding expression of support passed 234 to 193 in March 2019 41 In 2020 and 2021 the full House of Representatives voted on statehood bills both approved on party line votes with Democrats in support and Republicans in opposition 100 On April 30 2021 Democratic senator Joe Manchin came out against both H R 51 and S 51 effectively dooming their passage 101 Republicans Edit The national Republican Party opposes statehood and believes a constitutional amendment would be required for the district to become a state The 2016 Republican party platform stated Statehood for the District can be advanced only by a constitutional amendment Any other approach would be invalid 102 Congressional Republicans have strongly opposed statehood bills that attempt to make the district a state without amending the Constitution first characterizing congressional Democrats attempts to pass statehood through as legislation as an unconstitutional power grab to gain two progressive Senate seats 103 Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has called D C statehood full bore socialism and promised to object to any statehood push in the Senate 104 105 106 The D C Republican Party platform says The District of Columbia must either become a state or its residents must be exempt from federal income taxes 107 Polling Edit Areapolled Segmentpolled Polling firm Date Approve Disapprove Unsure No opinion Samplesize Pollingmethod Source s UnitedStates Adult Citizens The Economist YouGov December 17 20 2022 41 36 23 1 500 online 108 Registered voters RMG Research Rasmussen Reports March 18 20 2021 35 41 24 1 200 online 109 Likely voters Data for Progress February 19 22 2021 54 35 11 1 526 online 110 All adults Fortune SurveyMonkey January 11 12 2021 49 45 6 2 554 online 111 Likely voters The New York Times Siena September 22 24 2020 59 26 15 950 telephone 112 Registered voters Data for Progress August 26 September 1 2020 43 34 23 1 025 online 113 Registered voters Lake Research Partners August 10 14 2020 49 22 29 940 online 114 Registered voters The Hill and HarrisX June 22 23 2020 48 52 951 online 115 All adults Gallup June 19 30 2019 29 64 8 1 018 telephone 116 Registered voters Data for Progress January 25 29 2019 35 28 37 1 282 online 117 All adults YouGov September 18 19 2014 27 49 24 997 online 118 majority approve plurality approve majority disapprove plurality disapprove plurality unsure or have no opinionSee also EditAdmission to the Union 51st state District of Columbia home rule Hawaii Admission Act the last admission law of a new US state 1959 History of the District of Columbia Australian Capital Territory statehood movement Puerto Rico statehood movement 2016 Washington D C statehood referendum 2017 Puerto Rican status referendum 2020 Puerto Rican status referendumReferences Edit Change in Resident Population of the 50 States the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico 1910 to 2020 PDF Census gov United States Census Bureau Archived PDF from the original on April 26 2021 Retrieved April 27 2020 Population density in the U S by federal states including the District of Columbia in 2020 Statista 2020 United States Summary 2010 Population and Housing Unit Counts 2010 Census of Population and Housing PDF United States Census Bureau September 2012 pp V 2 1 amp 41 Tables 1 amp 18 Retrieved February 7 2014 GDP by State GDP by State U S Bureau of Economic Analysis BEA Bureau of Economic Analysis Retrieved March 26 2021 Per capita Real Gross Domestic Product GDP of the United States in 2019 by state in chained 2012 U S dollars Statista 2019 S1901 INCOME IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS IN 2018 INFLATION ADJUSTED DOLLARS data census gov December 19 2019 Retrieved December 20 2019 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved May 2 2020 D C Law Library Subchapter II Statehood PDF Council of the District of Columbia March 10 1981 Archived from the original on February 18 2018 Retrieved December 31 2017 Norton Eleanor Holmes January 3 2019 H R 51 116th Congress 2019 2020 Washington D C Admission Act United States Congress Archived from the original on September 20 2019 Retrieved September 19 2019 District of Columbia House Voting Rights Act of 2007 Hearing Notes DIANE publishing March 14 2007 p 23 ISBN 978 1 4223 2085 3 a b c Madison James April 30 1996 The Federalist No 43 The Independent Journal Library of Congress Archived from the original on September 14 2013 Retrieved May 31 2008 a b Forbes Lindsay C H 1908 Washington The City and Seat of Government PDF Philadelphia The John C Winston Co p 110 Archived from the original PDF on November 17 2015 Retrieved November 16 2015 Statement on the subject of The District of Columbia Fair and Equal Voting Rights Acts PDF American Bar Association September 14 2006 Archived from the original PDF on July 25 2008 Retrieved July 10 2008 Woodward Augustus 1801 Considerations on the government of the Territory of Columbia as they appeared in the National intelligencer Washington DC Samuel Harrison Smith Hatch Orrin January 1 1978 Should the Capital Vote in Congress A Critical Analysis of the Proposed D C Representation Amendment Fordham Urban Law Journal 7 3 479 539 Archived from the original on September 28 2020 Retrieved November 5 2020 Congressional Record 1805 979 980 Chris Myers Asch Derek Musgrove 2017 Chocolate City A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation s Capital Chapel Hill NC UNC Press Books p 417 ISBN 9781469635873 Archived from the original on April 24 2021 Retrieved April 21 2021 Guide to the District of Columbia Statehood Constitutional Convention Records 1982 Library gwu edu George Washington University Archived from the original on November 19 2016 Retrieved July 7 2016 DC Statehood Constitutional Convention Transcript from George Washington University Libraries DC Statehood Constitutional Convention Records archive org Retrieved August 24 2017 DC Statehood a Chronology DC Statehood Green Party Archived from the original on October 26 2006 Retrieved December 29 2008 Constitution for the State of New Columbia enacted 1987 Westlaw Archived July 31 2008 at the Wayback Machine District of Columbia House Voting Rights Act of 2007 Hearing before the Committee of the Judiciary DIANE March 14 2007 ISBN 9781422320853 Archived from the original on April 23 2021 Retrieved November 26 2015 Sheridan Mary Beth May 29 2008 D C Seeks to Fund Lobbying Effort for a Voting House Member The Washington Post pp B01 Archived from the original on October 10 2008 Retrieved December 29 2008 Greenwood Arin December 20 2012 D C Statehood Senate Bill By Joe Lieberman Would Make New Columbia 51st State The Huffington Post Archived from the original on February 2 2013 Retrieved February 18 2013 Plotkin Mark November 23 2012 A good deal for the District and Puerto Rico The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 16 2013 Retrieved February 18 2013 Miller Mark February 11 2012 Puerto Rico referendum could revitalize D C statehood debate The Washington Times Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved February 18 2013 DeBonis Mike July 21 2014 Obama on D C statehood I m for it The Washington Post Archived from the original on July 22 2014 Retrieved July 21 2014 Obama on D C statehood I m for it Usatoday com July 21 2014 Archived from the original on January 18 2016 Retrieved July 7 2016 D C paid more in taxes July 29 2016 Archived from the original on August 9 2016 Simpson Ian September 15 2014 Senate holds hearing on District of Columbia statehood Reuters Archived from the original on September 15 2014 Retrieved September 15 2014 District of Columbia Washington DC Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization Archived from the original on June 29 2017 Retrieved June 8 2017 Austermuhle Martin Mayor Wants Statehood Vote This Year By D C Residents WAMU 88 5 Archived from the original on April 18 2016 Retrieved April 15 2016 Giambrone Andrew April 29 2016 D C Statehood Commission Will Release Draft Constitution Next Friday Washington City Paper Archived from the original on May 29 2016 Retrieved May 15 2016 Kinney Jen Welcome New Columbia D C Drafts 51st State Constitution Next City Archived from the original on May 10 2016 Retrieved May 15 2016 DC Voters Elect Gray to Council Approve Statehood Measure 4 NBC Washington November 8 2016 Archived from the original on November 9 2016 Retrieved November 9 2016 DC Council approves name change if district becomes state Washington Examiner October 18 2016 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved April 5 2017 Eleanor Norton March 2 2017 H R 1291 115th Congress 2017 2018 Washington D C Admission Act www congress gov Archived from the original on March 7 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 a b Washington D C Admission Act U S State Federal Government Of The United States United States Congress May 25 2017 Archived from the original on January 7 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 These Young People Are Fighting for D C s Statehood Teen Vogue October 23 2020 Retrieved November 14 2022 a b House leadership gives its blessing to D C statehood The Washington Post January 4 2019 Archived from the original on January 11 2019 Retrieved January 11 2019 a b c Editorial Board March 12 2019 The House finally voted to support D C statehood It s a needed step The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 24 2019 Retrieved April 24 2019 a b c Phillips Morgan June 26 2020 House passes DC statehood bill Here s how it would work Fox News Archived from the original on July 25 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 House approves DC statehood bill GOP calls move Dem power grab Fox News June 26 2020 Archived from the original on June 26 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 Sprunt Barbara June 16 2020 House Democrats Aiming To Make A Point Plan Vote On D C Statehood NPR org Archived from the original on June 25 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 Portnoy Jenna June 26 2020 D C statehood approved by U S House for first time in history Washington Post Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Retrieved June 27 2020 Robertson Thomas January 3 2021 DC statehood boasts record support in new Congress WTOP News Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 8 2021 H R 51 a b Wofford Benjamin August 10 2020 Would DC Statehood Also Give the Trumps Three Electoral Votes Washingtonian Archived from the original on February 12 2021 Retrieved February 18 2021 Committee Votes to Pass H R 51 the Washington D C Admission Act house gov Press release April 14 2021 Archived from the original on April 14 2021 Retrieved April 14 2021 House Passes Bill Proposing to Make Washington D C the 51st State The Wall Street Journal April 22 2021 Archived from the original on April 22 2021 Retrieved April 22 2021 Carper Thomas R January 26 2021 S 51 117th Congress 2021 2022 A bill to provide for the admission of the State of Washington D C into the Union Congress gov Archived from the original on January 27 2021 Retrieved January 27 2021 Burnett Rebecca January 27 2021 D C statehood bill reintroduced in Congress WDVM Archived from the original on February 3 2021 Retrieved January 27 2021 Cosponsors S 51 117th Congress 2021 2022 Congress gov Archived from the original on March 23 2021 Retrieved April 17 2021 Quick Facts District of Columbia United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on April 26 2019 Retrieved January 8 2021 Virginia Declaration of Rights by George Mason Revolutionary War and Beyond Archived from the original on December 29 2010 Retrieved February 25 2011 Berman Russell May 24 2016 Congress Rejects D C s Declaration of Fiscal Independence The Atlantic Retrieved May 24 2016 Bowser reiterates call for DC statehood after Capitol riots The Hill January 7 2021 Archived from the original on January 7 2021 Retrieved January 8 2021 Norton Says Latest UN Human Rights Committee Criticism of U S Treaty Violation on D C Voting Rights Calls for Urgent Action from the Administration and Congress Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton March 28 2014 Archived from the original on January 12 2021 Retrieved January 28 2021 UNPO District of Columbia Washington DC unpo org Archived from the original on October 23 2019 Retrieved July 29 2019 Fayyad Abdallah May 3 2021 Call Republican opposition to D C statehood what it is Racist The Boston Globe Capital Injustice An Analysis of Statehood for Washington D C and its Projected Impacts on Disenfranchised Women and Black Americans PDF Report Gender Equity Policy Institute GEPI June 2021 Retrieved August 6 2021 Individuals Living or Working in U S Possessions Internal Revenue Service Archived from the original on September 4 2011 Retrieved July 24 2008 Internal Revenue Gross Collections by Type of Tax and State Fiscal Year 2007 XLS Internal Revenue Service 2008 Archived from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved August 20 2008 Chan Sewell November 5 2000 Message Gets Rolling D C Government Enlists Residents Vehicles In Campaign for Congressional Representation The Washington Post p C01 Archived from the original on May 1 2011 Retrieved August 6 2008 Transition in Washington Political License Plate Is Out Bush Says The New York Times January 19 2001 Archived from the original on September 19 2008 Retrieved August 6 2008 Craig Tim January 15 2013 Obama to use D C taxation without representation license plates The Washington Post Archived from the original on January 19 2013 Retrieved January 16 2013 Davis Aaron January 26 2017 Trump s limo sports D C s protest license plates Taxation Without Representation The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 16 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 Nelson Steve Bowden Ebony May 5 2020 Trump says Washington DC will never be a state because of all the Democrats New York Post Archived from the original on June 2 2020 Retrieved June 2 2020 a b c H R 1291 To provide for the admission of the State of Washington D C into the Union PDF statehood dc gov March 1 2017 Archived PDF from the original on June 22 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Distribution of Electoral Votes National Archives and Records Administration September 19 2019 Archived from the original on April 21 2021 Retrieved May 6 2021 For example a letter from 39 Constitutional scholars suggests that Congress could require District electors to vote in favor of the presidential ticket that receives the most Electoral College votes of the remaining 538 electors Or alternatively Congress could require that District electors vote for the winner of the national popular vote winner Kapur Sahil May 24 2021 Dozens of constitutional scholars tell Congress it has power to make D C a state NBC News Retrieved June 19 2021 a b Pate R Hewitt August 27 1993 D C Statehood Not Without a Constitutional Amendment The Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on November 17 2020 Retrieved February 18 2021 Muller Derek T May 6 2021 The DC Statehood Proposal Could Give a Handful of People Three Electoral Votes Real Clear Policy Archived from the original on May 6 2021 Retrieved May 6 2021 Thomas Kenneth R September 19 2019 Statement before Committee on Oversight and Reform of U S House of Representatives Hearing on H R 51 the Washington D C Admission Act PDF United States House of Representatives website Archived PDF from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved February 18 2021 District of Columbia Maryland Reunion Act 110th Congress H R 1858 GovTrack 2007 Archived from the original on November 5 2008 Retrieved December 29 2008 Q amp A with Rep Tom Davis The Washington Post March 3 1998 Archived from the original on February 24 1999 Retrieved January 26 2013 Hadden Loh Tracey Make DC part of Maryland Most GGWash contributors don t like the idea Greater Greater Washington Archived from the original on July 1 2020 Retrieved May 15 2020 a b District of Columbia Voting Rights Restoration Act of 2004 108th Congress H R 3709 GovTrack 2004 Archived from the original on December 1 2011 Retrieved December 29 2008 Rohrabacher Dana June 23 2004 Testimony before the Committee on Government Reform PDF DC Vote Archived from the original PDF on November 29 2008 Retrieved December 27 2008 Lieberman Deeply Disappointed By Failure To Secure 60 Votes For Equal Representation For D C Citizens Senator Joseph Lieberman CT September 18 2007 Archived from the original on February 3 2010 Retrieved December 28 2008 Turley Jonathan August 20 2007 D C Vote in Congress House Judiciary Committee Statement for the Record Legislative Hearing on H R 5388 Archived from the original on January 30 2009 Retrieved December 28 2008 List of Supporters DC Statehood Coalition Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Retrieved January 8 2021 D C Statehood is a Racial Justice Issue Catholic Social Justice Lobby June 26 2020 Archived from the original on September 23 2020 Retrieved January 8 2021 2021 General Assembly Business Agenda Actions of Immediate Witness Stop Voter Suppression and Partner for Voting Rights and a Multiracial Democracy Unitarian Universalist Association Retrieved August 6 2021 Jenkins Jack June 22 2021 As Senate convenes hearing more than 300 faith leaders declare support for DC statehood Religion News Service Retrieved July 16 2021 About Us Iowans For D C Statehood Retrieved November 5 2022 DC Statehood Supporters Government of the District of Columbia Archived from the original on May 7 2021 Retrieved August 8 2021 Civil Rights Community Letter to President Biden on Voting Rights and DC Statehood Legislation Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights July 22 2021 Archived from the original on July 25 2021 Retrieved August 8 2021 DeBonis Mike Flynn Meagan March 20 2021 It s not a local issue anymore D C statehood moves from political fringe to the center of the national Democratic agenda The Washington Post Archived from the original on March 21 2021 Retrieved March 21 2021 Statehood DC Democrats Retrieved May 2 2021 Sabot Ryan May 14 2013 The Libertarian Case for DC Statehood The Insomniac Libertarian Archived from the original on April 23 2021 Retrieved November 5 2020 Platform DC Statehood Green Party Archived from the original on October 19 2020 Retrieved November 5 2020 The 2020 Platform of the District of Columbia Republican Party Retrieved May 4 2021 Norton Hillary Clinton Supports D C Statehood Washington City Paper July 14 2015 Archived from the original on August 15 2015 Retrieved August 12 2015 Should Washington D C be granted statehood The Washington Post Archived from the original on December 16 2019 Retrieved January 7 2020 Statement of Administration Policy H R 51 Washington D C Admission Act PDF Press release Washington DC The White House April 21 202 Archived PDF from the original on April 20 2021 Retrieved April 21 2021 Ryan Tim Dems Think Now s the Time for D C Statehood Courthouse News Retrieved July 28 2016 a b Davis Aaron Congress takes up bill to make D C the 51st state The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 16 2014 Retrieved August 26 2017 a b McCartney Robert Critics of D C statehood cite specious objections such as Grave Snowplow Threat The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 2 2017 Retrieved August 26 2017 Khalil Ashraf April 22 2021 DC statehood approved by House as Senate fight looms Associated Press Retrieved April 22 2021 Kapur Sahil Clark Dartunorro April 30 2021 Manchin opposes D C Statehood dealing a blow to Democratic priority NBC News Retrieved December 14 2022 Republican Platform 2016 pg 30 PDF Retrieved May 2 2021 Breuninger Kevin April 22 2021 House passes DC statehood bill that faces long odds in the Senate CNBC News Retrieved April 22 2021 Mitch McConnell Calls D C Statehood Full Bore Socialism DCist Archived from the original on May 1 2021 Retrieved May 1 2021 Yes D C statehood is divisive that doesn t mean it s unconstitutional MSNBC com April 21 2021 Retrieved May 1 2021 Forgey Quint August 27 2020 We will stand our post McConnell defends GOP Senate urges against D C statehood Politico Retrieved August 27 2020 The 2020 Platform of the District of Columbia Republican Party Retrieved May 4 2021 32 D C Statehood PDF YouGov Retrieved April 26 2023 35 Favor Statehood For Washington DC Rasmussen Reports March 22 2021 Retrieved March 22 2021 New poll shows uptick in support for DC statehood FOX 5 DC March 22 2021 Archived from the original on March 22 2021 Retrieved March 22 2021 Fortune SurveyMonkey poll social media and tech SurveyMonkey Archived from the original on January 29 2021 Retrieved March 22 2021 Biden Leads Trump 49 41 Among Likely Voters Nationally Siena College Research Institute scri siena edu Archived from the original on March 2 2021 Retrieved March 22 2021 McElwee Sean Ray John September 8 2020 VOTERS HAVE MOVED IN FAVOR OF DC AND PUERTO RICO STATEHOOD dataforprogress org Archived from the original on January 27 2021 Retrieved September 8 2020 Gotoff Daniel Lake Celinda Pugh McCauley September 4 2020 Analysis of Findings from New Nationwide Poll on D C Statehood PDF Lake Research Partners Archived PDF from the original on October 21 2020 Retrieved March 22 2021 Schulte Gabriela Poll Voters split on granting statehood to DC The Hill Archived from the original on January 31 2021 Retrieved June 25 2020 Jones Jeffrey M July 15 2019 Americans Reject D C Statehood Gallup com Gallup Archived from the original on November 2 2020 Retrieved July 15 2019 Ray John March 13 2019 Supporting DC Statehood Is Practical Politics dataforprogress org Data For Progress Archived from the original on January 25 2021 Retrieved March 13 2019 Moore Peter Half oppose statehood for Washington D C today yougov com YouGov Archived from the original on February 26 2021 Retrieved September 22 2014 External links EditDistrict of Columbia Statehood movement official website Statehood Research DC DC Vote 51 for 51 DC Statehood Coalition Neighbors United for DC Statehood Musgrove George Derek 2017 Statehood is Far More Difficult The Struggle for D C Self Determination 1980 2017 Washington History 29 2 3 17 hdl 11603 18649 JSTOR 90015019 Samuels Joel H 1993 DC Statehood Its Time Has Come Helvedius 5 1 23 24 doi 10 7916 D8FJ2DSM Schleicher David January 1 2014 Welcome to New Columbia The Fiscal Economic and Political Consequences of Statehood for D C Faculty Scholarship Series Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title District of Columbia statehood movement amp oldid 1181301552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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