DC voting rights updates
Here is an update on the DC Voting Right Act from DC Vote…
House Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI) announced that the Subcommittee on the Constitution will mark up the DC Fair and Equal House Voting Rights Act (DC Voting Rights Act, H.R. 5388) on September 14, 2006.
In a historic vote in May, the House Committee on Government Reform passed the DC Voting Rights Act with overwhelming bipartisan support and a vote of 29-4. Now the bill moves to the Judiciary Committee by way of the Subcommittee on the Constitution.
UN Rights Body Urges D.C. Vote in Congress
From DC Vote…
The United Nations Human Rights Committee on Friday urged U.S. lawmakers to give the District of Columbia a voting member of Congress, saying the lack of such representation appeared inconsistent with international law.
The rebuke came in a report released by the committee in Geneva on Friday which said residents of the U.S. capital deserved to take part in government affairs directly or through freely chosen representatives under the 1992 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
The District of Columbia has been without a voting member of Congress since its founding as the national capital in 1790 because it was specified by U.S. Constitution as a federal district that was not part of any state.
D.C. residents were not allowed to vote in presidential elections until 1961, when a constitutional amendment was ratified.
The U.N. Human Rights Committee said it “remains concerned that residents of the District of Columbia do not enjoy full representation in Congress, a restriction which does not seem to be compatible with article 25 of the Covenant.”
“The State party (the United States) should ensure the right of residents of the District of Columbia to take part in the conduct of public affairs, directly or through freely chosen representatives, in particular with regard to the House of Representatives,” the panel said.
Voting and human rights advocates welcomed the statement and hoped it would boost support for a bill to give Washington a seat in the House of Representatives.
Timothy Cooper, executive director of Worldrights, said the statement also could provide the basis for legal challenges to the prohibition on voting representation.
“No longer can the U.S. hide from its international obligations,” Cooper said. “It should act to right this human rights wrong without delay.”