[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 57 (Thursday, April 14, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H1686]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1030
TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
the District of Columbia (Ms. Norton) for 5 minutes.
Ms. NORTON. Mr. Speaker, Saturday is Emancipation Day in the District
of Columbia. It marks the day, April 16, 1862, when 3,100 slaves in the
District of Columbia led the way to freedom, securing their freedom 9
months before the Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves nationwide.
Isn't it ironic that, because Emancipation Day comes on a Saturday,
the American people are going to have 3 extra days to file your income
taxes?
Even though it is not a national holiday, it is a very special day
for those of us who live in the District of Columbia because we are
trying to get our full rights, the same rights as every other American.
While I vote in committee representing the people of the District of
Columbia, I cannot vote on this floor. Others can vote on this floor on
matters affecting my district and my district only, yet the District
has more residents than two States and as many residents as about seven
States in the United States. We outnumber Vermont and Wyoming.
There on this poster you see the District, Vermont, and Wyoming, yet
Vermont, Wyoming, and every other State in the United States have two
Senators and at least one Representative.
About seven States have one Representative who votes on this House
floor. I do not vote on this House floor. The people I represent have
earned every single right that every other American has.
Here on this poster are D.C.'s casualties in the major 20th-century
wars, where the District of Columbia outpaced many States in casualties
during those wars: World War I, more casualties than three States;
World War II, more casualties than four States; the Korean war, more
casualties than eight States; and the Vietnam war, more casualties than
ten States.
These are American citizens who went to war for their country, died
without a vote, did not come home, and their relatives today still do
not have the vote on this House floor and have no vote in the Senate of
the United States.
The largest irony of all, however, is shown on this poster. The
people I represent here in the Nation's Capital pay more taxes per
capita--more--than any residents of any State in the United States.
They pay the highest taxes--$12,000 per person--and there are almost
700,000 people here. Who pays the lowest taxes in the United States per
capita? It turns out to be Mississippi.
But wherever they come from, American citizens pay fewer taxes, less
in taxes, than the people who live in their Nation's Capital, even
though the people who live in the Nation's Capital live in a city that
is among the oldest American cities, whose citizens still do not have
their full rights as American citizens.
This is in violation of a treaty the United States signed in 1992,
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The United
States has been found to be in violation of that treaty because the
U.S. does not give the residents of the District of Columbia the same
rights as other Americans.
Ours is the only capital city in the world where those who live in
their capital do not have the same rights as others, yet, as you saw in
the District's casualties, this city has given and then given again.
The District wants to become the 51st State of the United States of
America. That is the only way we can keep the Congress from interfering
in our local affairs.
The District has to bring its own local budget to the Congress. We
raise $7 billion in the District of Columbia. Our budget has to come
here for the Congress to sign off so that we can spend our own money.
What kind of autocracy is this?
Of course, what is most frustrating to us is that most Americans
think that we who live in your Nation's Capital have the same rights as
every other American. After all, they see me on the House floor and
they see me vote in committee.
The greatest frustration, of course, to us is that most Americans do
not know we do not have the same rights as they, and they would not
countenance for a moment that there are in our country any Americans
who are treated as unequal citizens.
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