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April 17, 2007

A Little Joementum for Voting Rights

2007_0417_joeandeleanor.jpg


While the jury is still out on the number of people who attended for yesterday's voting rights march, one pleasant addition to the day was a reception for organizers hosted by Sen. Joe Lieberman. About 200 people escaped the elements and made their way to the Dirksen Senate Office Building for drinks, snacks and speeches from Lieberman, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton and others.

Preceded by a trumpet call from the festively dressed Faith, perennial mayoral candidate and local activist, Lieberman told the crowd he would enthusiastically support legislation to create a full voting Congressional seat for the District.

Lieberman said he formed a friendship with Norton during their time at Yale Law School and quickly agreed to sponsor her legislation in the Senate. Drawing parallels between the struggle for voting equality for blacks and women, the senator called D.C.'s vote-less status, "inconsistent with the founding principles of our nation." While he didn't attend the rally, Lieberman thanked marchers for braving Monday's gusty rain. In a bit of theatrics, he asked the crowd, "How many roads must the citizens of the nation's capital walk down to get full representation?" Of course the answer blowing in the wind was "too many." Somewhere, Bob Dylan cringed a little.

As we eagerly await the return of voting rights legislation to the House floor, Lieberman's energetic remarks seemed to convince many that the bill would have a least one friend on the other side of the Hill. Let's hope he'll maintain that level of energy when his fellow senators sink their teeth into the proposal.

Photo by Sommer Mathis


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Comments (8)

i think "Bob Dyland" cringed a little more when you spelled his last name wrong.

 

Umm - guys?

Has anyone in these parts read the Constitution?

If you want to vote, amend the Constitution, or MOVE. No one's forcing you to live here.

 

RFE, I'm not the Constitutional scholar you are, but I have a hard time with this:

Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several states which may be included within this union, according to their respective numbers
Gimme taxes and representation, or neither.

 

Lieberman's energetic remarks seemed to convince many that the bill would have a least one friend on the other side of the Hill.

Technically, Lieberman is not a Republican.

 

cminus -

Voting preferences aside, I think she's referring to the Senate chamber as "the other side of the Hill"

 

No representation equals no Federal taxes and no National Guard in Iraq. Let those who are "constitutional scholars" and live in "states" which vote in Congress send their residents to die in Iraq. A fair trade.

 

I love the 'no one is forcing you to live here' argument. It almost always comes from someone that hasn't lived in DC for long. The answer to inequality isn't to ignore it and run away. The correct response is to fight it.

On a side note, can anyone tell me how the various Commonwealths (Virginia, Mass, etc.) get to be counted as states? I know it's a technicality, but doesn't the wording say 'state', not 'Commonwealth'?

 

Jeff,

I knew that, but it wouldn't have been funny to acknowledge that.

(It might not have been funny anyway, but that's a different issue.)

 
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