D.C. shut out again
Los Angeles Times: This was to be the year that one of the great injustices of American democracy was to be redressed: the lack of voting representation in Congress for 600,000 residents of the District of Columbia. Instead, voting rights for D.C. fell victim to the inordinate influence of the gun lobby and a failure of nerve on the part of the House Democratic leadership.
On the eve of a vote to create a seat for the district in the House, Democratic leaders pulled the bill from consideration lest it be attached to legislation that would nullify restrictions on guns established by the District government. They made the right choice in the end, and it had the reluctant support of voting rights advocates, who concluded that the guns bill would involve intolerable interference with the District’s authority. But that strategic retreat might not have been necessary if the leadership hadn’t agreed initially to combine separate votes on voting rights and guns in a single bill. With a 77-seat majority, it should have been able to secure a standalone vote on D.C. voting rights.
Grim outlook
Although advocates of voting rights promise to persevere, the immediate outlook is grim. Not only is a midterm election beckoning, the passage of time has removed an incentive in the bill for Republicans to support it: a temporary extra seat for Republican-leaning Utah to balance the permanent seat for Democratic D.C. Utah is likely to pick up another seat anyway as the result of this year’s census.
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