[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 33 (Thursday, March 1, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H1127-H1129]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOME RULE IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentlewoman from the District of Columbia (Ms.
Norton) is recognized for 30 minutes.
Ms. NORTON. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I come to the floor today to begin a series of half-hour
conversations containing information that I believe many Members of our
House simply do not have, especially considering how often the
Constitution and the Framers are cited. I have no reason to believe
that there is any intention on the part of any Member to deny democracy
to any American citizen in our great country.
So during these half-hour Special Orders, I will be offering some
evidence and information that go back to the Framers and come forward
into the era when the District of Columbia was granted home rule in
order to try to inform Members of the standing of the District of
Columbia, which is often referred to as the ``Federal district.''
It, of course, is not a Federal district. It is a hometown of more
than 600,000 residents, which has been granted full and complete
authority to govern itself--too late, of course, but finally. It was
too late in this era, but not too late in the history of the country
because, as the country began, the citizens, indeed, at that time had
that right.
The Framers, of course, were confronted with a dilemma. They wanted a
capital to be located here in the District of Columbia, and they wanted
that capital to have the same rights as any other Americans. They had
had an experience in Philadelphia of some concern, when veterans had
marched on that capital, about who would defend the capital. They tried
to sort out this dilemma and thought they had by creating the District
of Columbia--whose residents would have the same rights as every other
American citizen, but giving the Congress authority over the District.
Let me indicate how that happened.
No one who has any knowledge of the history of our country can
believe that the Framers fought against taxation without representation
for everybody except the people who happened to live in the Nation's
Capital. That would be sacrilege to say that of the great Framers of
the Constitution, particularly since people from this very area, now
known as the District of Columbia, went to war on the slogan of ``no
taxation without representation'' and fought and died under that
slogan. They didn't go and die under that slogan so that everybody but
themselves could be freed from England and have full democracy.
It is also clear from looking at the Constitution that there were two
Maryland and two Virginia signers who made clear that in the land they
gave to the District of Columbia they weren't giving away their
citizens' rights. So their citizens in Maryland and Virginia, during
the 10-year transition period, in fact, voted for Members of this body
and had the right to vote in Maryland and Virginia.
Some would call what Congress has done in the intervening years an
abuse of power. I believe it is a failure to come to grips with what
the Framers intended. In Federalist 43, James Madison says from the
very beginning that there would be ``a municipal legislature for local
purposes, derived from their own suffrages.'' That's, of course, the
man and the document we rely on when we need some legislative history
about the Constitution.
It is very important to note that the first government in the city of
Washington was established in 1802 when the District of Columbia became
the Nation's Capital. At that point, contemporaneous with the
Constitution, there was a city council elected by the people of the
District of Columbia to fully govern this city the way the districts
and the jurisdictions of the Members of this body are fully governed.
In 1812, the city council was permitted to elect the mayor. Before
that, the mayor was appointed. In 1820 and thereafter, the mayor was
elected by the people. That continued until 1871.
It should be said that the status of the District of Columbia, until
home rule was granted, was constantly a part of the mix, the long,
tortured part of our history about racial segregation. Many of the
perpetrators who denied home rule were Southern Democrats. It was only
when a Southern Democrat who chaired the ``District Committee'' was
defeated, after the Voting Rights Act was passed, that the District was
granted home rule in 1973.
So this has not been a matter of party. If anything, the Republican
Party had much cleaner hands until recently when, for its own purposes,
it adopted the posture of deciding that there would be home rule when
it wanted and that violates every standard, every principle of the
Framers and Founders when members simply step in and try to abolish
democratic policy and laws enacted by a local government to which they
are not accountable.
{time} 1300
It's important to note that when the Home Rule Act was passed in
1973, the first line said that the purpose was to ``restore'' to the
citizens of the District of Columbia, ``restore''. Those words, I
think, were chosen with great meaning and understanding of history,
``restore'' because it was clear that the people who lived in this city
had every right of every other American citizen before the city was
created, that those from Maryland, Virginia, who gave the land, saw to
it that these rights were preserved. Only in the political maneuverings
of the Congress itself has that right been at risk, but that right has
never been at risk except for Members of Congress who did not adhere to
the principles of full democracy for every citizen of the United
States.
The purpose of the Home Rule Act was to restore, not to create,
rights. Congress can not create rights for people born in this country.
The rights are given with their citizenship.
Now the District of Columbia, if one looks at the Home Rule Act, and
the trends of all of the legislation preceding the Home Rule Act, was
never given partial home rule except when Members of Congress from
other jurisdictions decide they want to make changes in the District.
That is found nowhere in the Home Rule Act, and that flies in the face
of every principle of those who created the United States of America
and those who died under the slogan of ``no taxation without
representation.''
We created a very diverse democracy, and we have held it together
through a principle of local deference and local control. We have
people in one part of the country who detest some of the laws and
policies in another part of the country, but the first thing they will
do is honor local control and the right of local citizens to elect
people who are accountable to them. When those who are not accountable
to them want to get something done they must go to those who are,
indeed, accountable to them.
Congress thought about what enacting home rule would mean. It said,
there are some specific exceptions. Congress did not leave it to the
discretion of Members of this body to decide what those exceptions
would be. Congress, in fact, did something very specific with respect
to those exceptions because it understood that once home rule is
granted, there would be differences between the local legislature and
the Congress of the United States. So it said, this is what we mean,
and this is what we do not mean.
These limitations on the District and its council need to be
rehearsed and need to be understood by anybody who
[[Page H1128]]
believes in democracy as a principle here in the United States, as much
as we believed in it when all of us stood up for democracy in Egypt and
elsewhere in the Middle East and around the world. We have got to make
sure that we're not seen as hypocrites since we are the first to rise
when there is democracy that is ignored elsewhere, and appear to deny
it in our own country. That is something the world will never
understand.
The Congress, recognizing the differences, spelled out what the
exceptions would be, and you can imagine why the exceptions were there.
They have almost nothing to do with anything that a local legislature
would want to enact. Occasionally they do, and the District simply
cannot do it because it's in the Home Rule Act, and the District does
not do it because it's in the Home Rule Act.
For example, the District of Columbia cannot impose any tax on the
property of the United States or any of the several States. Well,
that's important because the property that is most valuable, the
property that would yield the most revenue, is located in the center,
the monumental core of the capital, and the District of Columbia would
not have a thing to worry about if it could tax that property. It
cannot be done.
The District of Columbia cannot lend the public credit, the credit of
the local jurisdiction, for support of any private undertaking. The
District cannot impose any tax, partial or whole, on the personal
income of individuals who are not residents of the District of
Columbia.
Now, I emphasize that one, because that's one that local citizens
particularly resent. It's a ban on a commuter tax. What it means is, if
you come into the District of Columbia to work, as hundreds of
thousands do from the surrounding region, use the resources, the roads,
partake of the same public amenities that residents do, nevertheless,
said the Home Rule Act, the District of Columbia may not impose any
commuter tax.
Well, the District, of course, resents that because there are
commuter taxes all over the United States. But the District isn't
asking to overturn the Home Rule Act; it's simply asking the Congress
abide by the Home Rule Act. Maybe at some point Congress would want to
reconsider this matter. I think my good friends of both parties from
Maryland and Virginia would not want this matter reconsidered.
At the moment, I haven't heard anyone say out that this is the reason
that you find people in the District of Columbia engaging in civil
disobedience. It is when Congress intervenes into the local affairs of
the District of Columbia. Yes, the commuter tax is a local matter, but
it involves other Americans.
The Home Rule Act says Congress wants you to have as much--I'm trying
to be fair--those who wrote it would say, we want you to have as much
jurisdiction, as much authority over your own business as you can. Once
you go to taxing those from another region, well, we are going to draw
the line.
Well, the District resents it, but there is at least a theory for why
that was done. There is no theory for trying to overturn a law of the
District of Columbia simply because you disagree with it, pure and
simple, no theory that can be mustered and certainly not from the
Framers, who were clear that every citizen of the United States,
including those who lived in the Nation's Capital, would have the full
democracy they fought for in the Revolutionary War.
{time} 1310
The Home Rule Act contains a height limit. Although many in the city
would like to build high, the Home Rule Act recognizes that the
monumental core has its own Federal meaning because that's where the
monuments and the Capitol are, and they did not want those buildings
which are central to our identity as a Nation overpowered by the tall
buildings, even skyscrapers, we see in other big cities. But there,
frankly, has not been a great deal of concern about that. Indeed, D.C.
has its own height limit. The height limit helps the city when it comes
to tourism. We, too, want everyone to see the monumental core, although
you will find a healthy number of citizens here who would like to build
as they build in other cities.
We are not trying to overturn the Home Rule Act now; we are trying to
get observance of the Home Rule Act. And when you pass a law that says,
for example, no District funds may be used on something because it
offends your personal predilection, you then are violating the most
basic principle of any democracy, and that is why I have come to the
floor and will be coming to the floor throughout the year.
The District of Columbia may not enact any regulation or law having
to do with any Federal court, any court of the United States. That's
true of any jurisdiction. And there are a number of others. The
District of Columbia cannot enact any law having to do with the
National Zoo. That's a Federal zoo. I'm not sure why someone was
concerned about that, but that's in the Home Rule Act. And you're not
going to find the District Mayor or city council or residents going to
the streets over the zoo.
They went to the streets because they passed a law that Members of
this House sought to overturn--and with respect to at least one of them
have succeeded--and that brings shame on our democracy, because if you
were to ask the citizens of the United States or of any place in the
world whether or not any Member of this body should be able to overturn
a law passed by the local government of the District of Columbia in a
democratic fashion, you would find almost nobody in this country who
would say yes, and you would find almost nobody in the world who would
say anything but, You cannot be serious; you, who preach democracy all
over the world. If these are your principles, the place and the time to
apply them is right here, right now, at home.
It is interesting to know that there was a lot of controversy until
finally the Home Rule Act was passed, and it is no accident that the
Home Rule Act was passed during the period of the sixties and the
seventies when the great civil rights laws were passed. The country
came to understand that you can hardly have civil rights laws and then
have people in your own capital who have no mayor, no city council, no
right to vote for local government, no vote in this body and still call
yourself a democracy. All of that came together in the sixties and the
seventies.
I'd like to refer to two Presidents from that era, the so-called home
rule era. You will find that every President of the era--in the postwar
era--agreed with the notion that the District of Columbia should have
unlimited right to self-government except for the express and specific
exceptions in the Home Rule Act. It was Richard Nixon who signed the
Home Rule Act. President Lyndon Johnson, in his message on home rule
made these comments:
Our Federal, State, and local governments rest on the
principle of democratic representation--the people elect
those who govern them. We cherish the creed declared by our
forefathers: No taxation without representation. We know full
well that men and women give the most of themselves when they
are permitted to attack problems which directly affect them.
Yet the citizens of the District of Columbia, at the very
seat of the government created by our Constitution, have no
vote in the government of their city. They are taxed without
representation. They are asked to assume the responsibilities
of citizenship while denied one of its basic rights. No major
capital in the free world is in a comparable condition of
disenfranchisement.
He laid it straight out. How did this happen? Well, the Congress got
a conscience from time to time and there were periods when the District
had its full home rule. This is one of those periods. The Congress does
not intervene into the life of this city--except when individual
Members disagree with its actions.
Let me read from Richard Nixon, who signed the Home Rule Act:
The District's citizens should not be expected to pay taxes
for a government which they have no part in choosing--or to
bear the full burdens of citizenship without the full rights
of citizenship. I share the chagrin that most Americans feel
at the fact that Congress continues to deny self-government
to the Nation's capital. I would remind the Congress that the
Founding Fathers did nothing of the sort. Home rule was taken
from the District only after more than 70 years of self-
government, and this was done on grounds that were either
factually shaky or morally doubtful.
It is morally doubtful for any Member of this body to assume he or
she has the right to tell the citizens of the District of Columbia how
to govern themselves unless you are a member of
[[Page H1129]]
the local body that governs the District of Columbia. If that is a
principle which applies to your district, it must apply to mine. So we
greatly resent that we are allowed to govern ourselves except when some
Member decides that some matter would be controversial in his district,
so, therefore, he wants to deny the District the right to carry out
that matter after that matter has become a matter of local law. Every
Framer would turn over in his grave to recognize that we could come to
the 21st century with such provisions.
Congress took action in the 110th and 111th Congresses to remove
prohibitions on the District's use of local funds for medical
marijuana, for needle exchange, and for abortions for low-income women.
In the 112th Congress, Republicans re-imposed the ban on the use of
local funds for abortion. Who do they think they are? They are
accountable to no one in the District of Columbia. They are in
straight, sure violation of every principle of the founding document.
I believe that in good faith many Members, especially newer Members,
are simply not aware of this history and not aware that it is grounded
in the Framers' documents themselves. That's why, instead of assuming
that any Member of this body would intentionally deny democracy to any
American, I think the way to proceed is for this American, this Member,
this representative of the people of the District of Columbia, to come
forward on occasion with information and material that I hope Members
will take under advisement.
I thank the Speaker, and I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________