Dear MoveOn member,
On June 26, for the first time since the District of Columbia was established 230 years ago, the House of Representatives voted to make it our nation's 51st state.
This bill was introduced by D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, who has been a delegate in the House since 1991—but because D.C. is not a state, she has never been allowed to vote. That's right: D.C.'s only representative in Congress (D.C. residents have no representation at all in the Senate) is not allowed a vote, even on issues affecting the district.
D.C. residents do not have the fundamental rights that they are entitled to as Americans.
Residents of the district do not have real representation or a full voice in government. They get no say in how their tax dollars are spent—which is the reason D.C. license plates say "Taxation Without Representation." D.C. residents have had the right to vote for president only since 1961, and to elect their own mayor and city council since 1973. D.C. does not have true local self-government: Congress not only reviews and can modify D.C.'s local budget but can also annul any law it does not agree with. D.C. residents have served, fought, and died in every war that our country has been in, yet the veterans who currently live in D.C. are denied the very rights and freedoms they risked their lives for.
Residents of the District of Columbia are Americans who have been denied a seat at the table of our democracy for far too long, and the Washington, D.C. Admission Act would bring an end to this long-standing injustice.
The fight for D.C. statehood is a fight for rights and equality—and against disenfranchisement and systemic racism. Of the 705,000 residents of our nation's capital, nearly 50% identify as Black or of two or more races.1
In its letter of endorsement for the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, the NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice wrote, "With a majority Black and brown population, the fight for D.C. Statehood cannot be separated from the struggle for racial justice in our nation. The lack of voting representation for D.C. residents is part of the harmful heritage of racial injustice in our nation. Our government cannot continue to arbitrarily revoke the fundamental, constitutional rights of our fellow citizens living in the District. It is wrong to justify the status quo based on party politics or the historical precedent of preventing Black and brown people from voting."2
Republicans in the GOP-led Senate said that they will not pass this bill, and Donald Trump has threatened to veto it. But if the American people speak up in support of their fellow Americans in the District of Columbia, we can force the Senate to finally do the right thing and make D.C. the 51st state.
Thanks!
–Devon Nir, Common Cause
Sources:
1. "QuickFacts: District of Columbia," United States Census Bureau, July 1, 2019
https://act.moveon.org/go/140820?t=10&akid=267575%2E40999114%2ERUgofM
2. "Broad, Overwhelming Support for Landmark D.C. Statehood Bill," House Committee on Oversight and Reform, June 26, 2020
https://act.moveon.org/go/140821?t=12&akid=267575%2E40999114%2ERUgofM
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