It often goes overlooked, but 700,000 American taxpayers in the nation’s capital have no voice in the United States Congress — because the District of Columbia is not a state. It is a flaw in our political system that House Democrats hope to address by approving legislation to create the nation’s 51st state.
“It is an American issue. The principles of our democracy are based in the fact that every person is represented equally and all those who pay taxes should be represented,” D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) said yesterday.
As a practical matter, the bill has no realistic chance of success in the Republican-led Senate, and even if it were to somehow advance in the upper chamber, Donald Trump has already said quite explicitly that he opposes giving Americans in D.C. representation in Congress. Indeed, the president has been quite candid on this, framing his position in overtly partisan terms.
Some of the White House’s allies, however, have tried to defend the GOP line in more subtle ways. Yesterday, for example, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) made his case as to why D.C. does not deserve statehood.
“Yes, Wyoming is smaller than Washington by population, but it has three times as many workers in mining, logging, and construction, and 10 times as many workers in manufacturing. In other words, Wyoming is a well-rounded, working-class state.”
As best as I can tell, the far-right Arkansan did not appear to be kidding.
Not surprisingly, some of Cotton’s colleagues did not find his nonsense persuasive.
“Job shaming! Awesome! I’m in. Great idea. This CANNOT go wrong. Let’s rank the virtue of every profession and if your state has too many workers in the bottom 20% you get kicked out of America. Who wants to start??” tweeted Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.). “DC residents are Americans who pay federal taxes and they shouldn’t get screwed just because Tom Cotton doesn’t think they have the right jobs,” wrote Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii).
Quite right. By Cotton’s reasoning, if elite lawmakers are satisfied that an area’s population has worthwhile jobs, then the American taxpayers in that area may be deserving of statehood. But if elite lawmakers conclude that those Americans’ communities are insufficiently “well-rounded,” then those taxpayers should be denied representation on Capitol Hill.
Proponents of D.C. statehood have already noted many times that D.C.’s population is already larger than some states, a list that includes North Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming. Those states have overwhelmingly white populations, while the majority of D.C. residents are African American.








