WASHINGTON (US) – Four decades after beginning its drive for US statehood, Washington, DC, is all set to take a step towards becoming the 51st state as the House of Representatives on Friday was expected to ratify it.
Though the initiative was likely to pass handily in the House, where Democrats hold the majority, Republicans for years have actively opposed creating a state that they predict would elect Democrats to Congress.
Voters in the city of Washington have elected only Democratic mayors in recent history. Creating a state out of Washington would likely make it more difficult for Republicans to win majorities in the Senate.
Last month President Donald Trump, a Republican, told the New York Post: “You mean District of Columbia, a state? Why? So we can have two more … Democrat senators and five more congressmen? No thank you. That’ll never happen.”
If it became a state, Washington would likely only have one lawmaker, not five.
Proponents say Washington’s 700,000 inhabitants – more than Vermont and Wyoming – have no voice in the federal government, despite paying federal taxes.
That status is protested with a slogan on Washington’s automobile licence plates that reads: “Taxation without representation.”
Currently, legislation passed by the district’s local government is subject to congressional review.
Local anger over the district’s status flared up most recently during the coronavirus pandemic. Washington received $500 million for its pandemic response, compared to the $1.2 billion the federal government accorded to each of the 50 states.
Amid nationwide protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd, an African American man, Trump sent National Guards from 10 states, despite the objection of the district’s mayor, to quell protests against racism and police brutality in the district.
“Not only do we not have voting senators and our congresswoman not have the right to vote, the whims of a federal government can encroach on our even limited autonomy,” said Mayor Muriel Bowser at a press conference.
The state would be named Washington, Douglass Commonwealth, after George Washington, the first US president, and Frederick Douglass, a former slave turned famed abolitionist.
It would include the district’s current 700,000 residents, but not major federal buildings, the National Mall, memorials and the museums, which would be housed in a federal enclave.
The last time the United States expanded was in 1959, when Congress approved admitting Alaska and Hawaii as the 49th and 50th states, respectively, following congressional votes and the support of the president.
The US constitution gives Congress the power to admit new states without specifying a process.
(Photos syndicated via Reuters)
This story has been edited by BH staff and is published from a syndicated field