Mayor Vincent Gray is not very popular in Washington, D.C. The Washington Post released a new poll yesterday indicating, in fact, that most D.C. residents want him to resign, his term in office having been stained by a campaign corruption scandal. If the people get what they want, perhaps Rep. Trent Franks of Arizona will want the job. Officially, that is — considering he’s already making policy for the city.
A bill banning abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy for women in the District of Columbia — where the sole delegate is not granted voting rights in Congress — is set to go to the full House floor for a vote. Guess who’s leading the effort? Yes, the Republican Congressman Franks.
Franks ushered the restrictive bill on abortion rights through the House Judiciary Committee along party lines on Wednesday, effectively clamping down on reproductive rights in the only region in the continental United States which is denied of full Congressional representation.
Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the district’s single delegate, chalked the bill up as a legislative threat to both physicians and reproductive rights, not to mention the voters whose rights are not represented.
“Anti-choice, far-right forces hope to use D.C. women as puppets in their effort to undermine Roe v. Wade by abusing federal authority over this city to get a phony federal imprimatur for their ongoing campaign to get similar bills passed in states across the nation,” Norton said in a statement.
And not only is Norton not allowed to vote on a bill that directly affects her constituents, and her constituents alone, but she was also denied the opportunity to speak before her colleagues with full voting powers during hearings over the bill this spring.









