There are more than 600,000 taxpaying Americans living in the District of Columbia, but they have no voice in Congress — the people of the nation’s capital city have a non-voting member and a congressional committee that sets limits and restrictions on the decisions of locally elected officials.
The arrangement is sometime awkward. For example, Rep. John Mica, a Florida Republican, rejected the city’s push for expanded authority over its own budget in a rather offensive way: “When my kids were young — teenagers — they wanted budget autonomy, too. You allow them to go their own way. When they get out of line, according to the Constitution, the Congress has the right to step in.”
For one thing, it’s not okay to compare hundreds of thousands of D.C. residents — most of whom are African American — to children. For another, the “parental” relationship between the city and Congress is ridiculous — there’s no other city in the United States in which Congress can “step in” and override the budget decisions of local officials elected by voters.
Making matters, it’s not just the budget that’s at issue.
Rep. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.) is bringing back a bill to ban most abortions in the District of Columbia after 20 weeks of pregnancy. […]
It will be opposed by supporters of abortion rights and the D.C. “home rule” movement, which believes Congress should not set policy in the District.









