Having grown up in suburban Washington, D.C., I have always been interested in the political situation of its residents, which now number at 692,683, according to the 2020 Census. That is greater than the populations of Vermont and Wyoming. I liked it when the citizens approved the motto "Taxation Without Representation" that appears on the license plates and replaced "A Capitol City" in 2000. In 2016, the new motto became "End Taxation Without Representation" and so the battle began.
The goal of the founding fathers was to prevent a state from having too much control over the workings of the federal government, so they established a city for that purpose along a small canal, a virtual tropical swamp, as Dolly Madison described it. That swampy village would be unrecognizable to the founders today.
Although I have long favored the possibility of statehood, as I believe all citizens in a republic should have a say in how they are governed and what they are actually paying taxes to achieve, carving a state out of a city is no easy task and, in actuality, is unconstitutional. It has been the goal for several years for Democrats to try to transform part of the District of Columbia into State of Washington, Douglass Commonwealth.
Originally named to honor our first president and the poetic nickname of the newly formed United States - Columbia, the feminine version of Columbus - Washington, D.C. is about one-eighteenth the size of Rhode Island and 18.9 percent larger than Denver International Airport. Changing it into a state will involve theatrical and constitutional difficulties.
The theatrical challenge will be to maintain straight faces while insisting that their (the Democrats who favor statehood) 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 percent of D.C. votes. In 2020, Donald Trump won 5.4 percent 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.” Which, in reality, is not entirely true. D.C., like Guam and the other territories, is represented by a duly-elected representative - albeit a non-voting one - and the citizens do elect the president.
It became inviolable recently. After 2009, when Democrats controlled Congress and the presidency, they did not act on D.C. statehood. Then, however, Democrats had 57 senators. Today, they have only 50. Does anyone believe that if D.C. were as incorrigibly Republican as it is Democratic, Democrats would favor D.C. statehood, which would mean two more Republican senators until the last trumpet shall sound?
There is, however, a constitutional impediment to D.C. statehood-by-statute. Paradoxically, the impediment was created to enlarge D.C.’s political rights and importance.
The Constitution’s Framers mandated creation of a seat of the federal government “not exceeding ten miles square” over which Congress would “exercise exclusive legislation.” This was done with 63 square miles from Maryland and 37 square miles from Virginia, which got its land back in 1847 prior to the Civil War. In 1961, ratification of the 23rd Amendment - the impediment - gave District residents the right to dispose presidential electoral votes no more numerous than those of “the least populous state.”
Historian John Steele Gordon, writing in City Journal, notes that in 1978 Congress sent to the states for ratification a constitutional amendment that would have treated the District as a state in federal elections, meaning it would have two senators and at least one House member. The amendment fell 22 states short of the 38 required for ratification.
A 2019 Gallup poll showed a national majority opposed to D.C. statehood. Many more than 13 states will probably always oppose D.C. statehood - for partisan reasons, or because they think D.C. as a state is facially implausible, or because they oppose the dilution of their senators’ powers (by becoming two of 102 rather than of 100). So, congressional Democrats now pro3pse legislatively reducing D.C. to a tiny enclave around the National Mall, and declaring the rest of the District a state.
But what about the 23rd Amendment? Because 38 states will not vote to repeal it in order to confer statehood on D.C., Democrats propose an almost inscrutable process to legislatively transfer to the new “state” the electoral votes constitutionally given to the District, which would be reduced to the mini enclave whose few hundred residents would vote in their “state of most recent domicile."
If you are confused, you understand.
But, as Cato Institute’s Roger Pilon has patiently explained to Congress, what was done by constitutional amendment cannot be undone by legislation. In 1961, a Democratic-controlled Congress understood that a constitutional amendment was necessary to give D.C. presidential electoral votes. In 1978, a Democratic-controlled Congress understood that an amendment was necessary to enlarge D.C.’s representation. But, in 2021, a Democratic-controlled Congress is resorting to a convoluted process to vitiate the Founders’ intent and evade constitutional due process. What, Pilon asks, has changed?
Democrats have. Their devotion to constitutional propriety expired four months ago, at noon on January 20.
Historian Gordon proposes a constitutional amendment that would confound Democrats by giving them what they say they want. It would repeal the 23rd Amendment and say: “For purposes of participating in federal elections only, the citizens of the seat of government of the United States shall be regarded and counted as being citizens of the state that ceded the land to the Government of the United States.”
D.C. residents would vote in Maryland presidential, United States Senate and United States House elections. Maryland, by acquiring approximately 700,000 citizens-for-voting-purposes, would gain an electoral vote. D.C. residents, transformed into Maryland voters, would cheerfully pay their federal taxes because they would vote for 2 percent of United States senators and 1/435th of the House membership. And Democrats’ primary interest - their altruist dedication to the inviolable principle of no taxation without representation - would be affirmed, so they would be serene.
Right?
Of course not.
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