Opinion | The anti-constitutional D C statehood pretense washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
GOP lawmaker: D.C. statehood bill fails constitutionality test
Monday, April 26, 2021 |
Chad Groening, Jody Brown (OneNewsNow.com)
English
Spanish
Legislation passed by the U.S. House last week to grant statehood to the District of Columbia doesn t pass constitutional muster. That s according to one of the Republicans who voted against it.
Voting along party lines with minority Republicans in opposition (216-208), the House approved H.R. 51 to create a 51st state with one representative and two senators. A tiny sliver of land including the White House, the U.S. Capitol, and the National Mall
(pictured) would remain as a federal district.
GEORGE WILL
WASHINGTON The Democratic-controlled Congress will soon try to transform part of the District of Columbia, which today is about one-eighteenth the size of Rhode Island but 18.9% larger than Denver International Airport, into a state. This will involve theatrical and constitutional difficulties.
The Democrats’ theatrical challenge will be to keep straight faces while insisting that their motivation is altruistic: indignation about D.C. residents paying federal taxes without being fully represented in Congress. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan came within 3,761 Minnesota votes of carrying all 50 states, but won less than 14% of Washington D.C. votes. In 2020, Donald Trump won 5.4% of the D.C. vote. San Francisco will never vote Republican but will do so before D.C. does. Democrats insist, however, that this is irrelevant to them: Their interest is the inviolable principle “no taxation without representation.”
George F. Will
WASHINGTONâThe Democratic-controlled Congress will soon try to transform part of the District of Columbia, which today is about one-eighteenth the size of Rhode Island but 18.9% larger than Denver International Airport, into a state. This will involve theatrical and constitutional difficulties.
The Democratsâ theatrical challenge will be to keep straight faces while insisting that their motivation is altruistic: indignation about D.C. residents paying federal taxes without being fully represented in Congress.
In 1984, President Ronald Reagan came within 3,761 Minnesota votes of carrying all 50 states, but won less than 14% of Washington D.C. votes. In 2020, Donald Trump won 5.4% of the D.C. vote. San Francisco will never vote Republican but will do so before D.C. does. Democrats insist, however, that this is irrelevant to them: Their interest is the inviolable principle âno taxation without representation.â