March 26th, 2007
Congressional Quarterly reports,
The problem for the Democrats began when the Congressional Budget Office reported that the bill (HR 1433) would increase mandatory spending by $2.5 million, in addition to creating an at-large House seat for Utah and permanently expanding the District’s voting rights in the House.
… Democrats decided to offset the cost. They did so by drafting rules for debate that, upon adoption, would counter the price of the bill with a 0.003 percentage point change to a provision of federal tax withholding law …
… By adding a tax provision to the D.C. voting measure, Democrats broadened what is known as the thread of germaneness … the measure suddenly contained two unrelated provisions affecting the District the voting changes and an alteration of federal tax law that applies to all taxpayers … [making] more District-related provisions germane, according to GOP aides.
Such is how the outrageously non-germane repeal of District gun restrictions was thrown into the mix, causing the bill to be moved to the back burner. How is it that Milton-Bradley hasn’t turned “Parliament” into a board game by now?
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March 22nd, 2007
“of the several states” versus “exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever”
…with a lament for “full and open debate.”
David Dreier: “It’s a tax increase.”
rhetoric: “completely political and arbitrary”
Tom Davis: “jury trial, right to sue, full faith and credit” — other rights which DC citizens are afforded which the Constitution says are for the people of the “several states”
cynicism: “I see lips moving about bi-partisanism.”
Eleanor Holmes Norton: “I’ve been virtually driven to the floor by the abstractions of the discussion.”
strict constructionalism: “What is offered today is completely unconstitutional.”
Steve King: congressmen are “obligated to vote against a bill they know to be unconstitutional” under their oath.
optimism: “I look forward to a spirited colloquy as we move through this.”
Sheila Jackson Lee: “don’t read, like the bible, one part, without reading the other” — on selective readings of the Constitution.
Tom Davis: “We’re trying to take the politics out of this.”
Steny Hoyer: “If we can fight for democracy in Baghdad, we can vote for democracy in DC.”
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March 22nd, 2007
… and Bush’s advisors are urging the President to veto it. There’s a showdown brewing…
Gist
Analog Jepack
The Dance Party
Telemetrik
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March 21st, 2007
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March 17th, 2007
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March 17th, 2007
Just as the bill to give DC a full voting seat is almost sure to pass the House next week, the Bush administration plays its cards: “D.C. is not a state.”
Hmmm… I don’t think that has ever been contested, if proposed. White House spokesman Alex Conant reveals, “The Constitution specifies that only ‘the people of the several states’ elect representatives to the House.”
The Constitution does state, “The House of Representatives shall be … chosen every second Year by the People of the several States,” while Senators are “chosen by the Legislature” of each state.
Perhaps then, only a bill offering two Senators for the District would be Constitutional?
Here’s the poker tell: the current administration is willing to support a trillion-dollar spending spree to spread war/democracy in the middle east, but not approve a resolution to validate democracy in its own seat of power. They don’t support democracy, they support political gain for a political party.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/16/AR2007031601923.html
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February 19th, 2007
Via BoingBoing, we read that, compared to overpriced marquis cities like New York, Boston and San Fran, the District is “the big outlier”, “where an ever expanding federal government and its satellites continue to draw in ever more educated workers.”
That’s all this Wall Street Journal article says about DC, but it rightly points to several points of interest for us: a) that the US’s marquis cities are acknowledged as overpriced for the culture they offer, cultural experiences available elsewhere for less; b) that Washington, DC is seen as an outlier, and not a b-list city like Las Vegas, Austin or Charlotte; and c) that the ever-expanding federal government is indeed drawing people to this city.
Perhaps being an “outlier” of nationwide metropolitan trends is a good thing, and appropriate for the nation’s capital. The exact quote, “The big outlier here, as in many things, is Washington, DC,” acknowledges that DC is usually the exception to the rule. The culture here will always be incomparable because of the nature of this place. But the distinction in the context of the article belies the fact that the city is underrated, acceptably priced, and full of the culture of the nation’s marquis cities.
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February 13th, 2007
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February 5th, 2007
Dig it:
http://www.rollcall.com/issues/52_74/ath/16842-1.html
Who in the audience doesn’t have a paid subscription to the magazine of Capitol Hill? Anyone at all? Just in case, here’s a link to a pdf of the article.
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February 1st, 2007
Here’s a virtual mobius strip: our blog coverage of DC Vote’s eBulletin coverage of us. Mmmm, the circle remains unbroken.
http://www.dcvote.org/library/bulletin.cfm?bulletinID=38#tvspfeevwa
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