Jonathan Prince on 16 Oct 2000 19:40:41 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Supreme Court Affirms Lack of D.C. Vote |
Supreme Court Affirms Lack of D.C. Vote http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16143-2000Oct16.html By Bill Miller Washington Post Staff Writer Monday , October 16, 2000 The Supreme Court today affirmed a lower court's ruling that District of Columbia residents do not have a constitutional right to a voting representative in Congress. The justices' ruling was a blow to a coalition of D.C. activists who had turned to the courts for what they hoped would be a landmark voting rights decision. They contended that the District's 500,000 residents should have the same rights as citizens of the 50 states to choose voting members of Congress. The District has an elected delegate, Eleanor Holmes Norton (D), who may vote in committee but is barred from voting on the House floor. Activists said they now will push Congress to pass D.C. voting rights legislation. But the political process faces obstacles, too - Congress wouldn't even permit the D.C. government, a party in the case, to spend money on the voting rights suit. And the Justice Department argued in court against the activists' position. "The battle moves to a different arena," said Walter A. Smith Jr., one of the attorneys on the case. "Ultimately we're going to win this. It's just a question of when, and in which arena. Congress now has the option of doing the right thing." The Supreme Court upheld the lower court's decision in a pair of cases that had the potential to reverse 199 years of federal tradition. In March, a special three-judge panel ruled that the Constitution and Supreme Court precedent provide voting rights in Congress only to people living in states and not to residents of the District. The panel's ruling hinged largely upon Article 1 of the Constitution, which says that Congress shall be comprised of "Members chosen every second Year by the People of the several States." Because the District is not a state, the majority held, its citizens are not entitled to a vote in Congress. The majority ruling said the court was not "blind to the inequity of the situation" but said it was up to Congress to act. Because the lawsuits concerned voting rights, they were entitled to automatic review by the Supreme Court. But that didn't necessarily mean all nine justices would convene a full-scale hearing, and today the justices decided to let the panel's ruling stand after a review of legal papers. The action creates a legal precedent, lawyers said. The Supreme Court considered two lawsuits filed by separate sets of D.C. activists. One of the lawsuits, Adams et al. v. Clinton et al., wanted the court to make it possible for D.C. residents to choose statehood or unite with another state, such as Maryland. The other suit, Alexander et al. v. Daley et al., wanted the court to order Congress to find a way to gain D.C. a vote. The Adams complaint was pushed by a group of 20 activists led by attorney George S. LaRoche. The D.C. government joined 57 residents in filing the Alexander suit; Smith, a former deputy corporation counsel, was among the attorneys working on that case. Only one justice, John Paul Stevens, voted to hear oral arguments in the Alexander suit. Stevens said he would have let the Adams ruling stand. Even while the lawsuits were working their way through the courts, community leaders were waging a grass-roots campaign for their cause. In November, the District will begin distributing license plates that read "Washington D.C. - Taxation Without Representation." DC Vote, a nonprofit group, has produced a videotape and other materials showcasing the issue and has lobbied delegates at recent political conventions. © 2000 The Washington Post -- .. Jonathan Prince : No New jonathan@killyourtv.com : Oilgarchies http://KillYourTV.com : http://www.GWBushSucks.com ........................................................ 'Political language...is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.' - George Orwell _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold