Press Releases
Wexton Votes to Pass Legislation to Make DC the 51st State
Washington,
April 22, 2021
Washington, D.C. -- Today, Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton (D-VA) voted for H.R. 51, legislation to grant statehood to Washington, D.C. The Washington, D.C. Admission Act would admit D.C. as the 51st state -- securing for the city’s 712,000 residents voting representation in Congress and full self-government. Currently, Americans living in the District are subject to federal taxes and federal policies without full representation in the federal government or full self-governance at the local level. “DC statehood is a matter of racial, economic, and democratic justice. H.R. 51 takes us one step closer to ending the disenfranchisement of the more than 700,000 Washingtonians, the majority of whom are Black and Brown,” said Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton. “Washingtonians pay the most in federal income tax per capita in the entire country, yet are denied the right to have a say in how those tax dollars are spent. It’s time to deliver the same basic protections and representation that all Americans enjoy to our neighbors across the Potomac. I was proud to vote for DC statehood today.” This legislation, which was introduced by Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton and has 216 Democratic cosponsors, would grant the new state two voting senators and, based on its population, one voting representative to Congress. It would also establish an autonomous local government, which would no longer be subjected to Congressional control. As the violent attack on January 6th and the previous Administration’s brutal crackdown on peaceful protestors last summer made clear, it is critical that D.C. is empowered to make its own governing decisions -- including law enforcement -- in order to best protect its residents. The Constitution grants Congress the authority to admit new states into the Union without need for a constitutional amendment -- and it has done so to grant statehood to each of the 37 states admitted after the original thirteen. When evaluating a bid for statehood, Congress has historically considered support for statehood, resources, and population. D.C. meets this criteria in the following ways:
The 51st state, which would be renamed Washington, Douglass Commonwealth, would be made up of 66 square miles of the city’s current 68 square miles. The remaining two square miles -- comprised of the White House, Capitol, Supreme Court, principal federal monuments, and federal buildings adjacent to the National Mall -- would be the new federal district and seat of the United States government. Last Congress marked the first time in nearly three decades that the House voted on a D.C. statehood bill, and the measure was approved 232 to 180. After passing the House today, the bill now goes to the Senate for consideration. ### |