Bill Text: HI SCR195 | 2022 | Regular Session | Introduced


Bill Title: Urging Members Of The United States Congress To Enact Federal Legislation Granting Statehood To The People Of Washington, D.c.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 11-0)

Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2022-04-18 - Report adopted; referred to the committee(s) on JHA with none voting aye with reservations; Representative(s) McDermott, Okimoto, Ward voting no (3) and Representative(s) Ohno, Woodson excused (2). [SCR195 Detail]

Download: Hawaii-2022-SCR195-Introduced.html

THE SENATE

S.C.R. NO.

195

THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2022

 

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

SENATE CONCURRENT

RESOLUTION

 

 

URGING MEMBERS OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO ENACT FEDERAL LEGISLATION GRANTING STATEHOOD TO THE PEOPLE OF WASHINGTON, D.C.

 

 

 


     WHEREAS, the people living on the land that would eventually be designated as the District of Columbia were provided the right to vote for representation in Congress when the United States Constitution was ratified in 1788; and

 

     WHEREAS, the passage of the Organic Act of 1801 placed the District of Columbia under the exclusive authority of the United States Congress and abolished residents' right to vote for members of Congress and the President and Vice President of the United States; and

 

     WHEREAS, residents of the District of Columbia were granted the right to vote for the President and Vice President of the United States through passage of the Twenty–third Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1961; and

 

     WHEREAS, based on its annual estimate of resident populations, April 1, 2020, to July 1, 2021, United States Census Bureau data estimates the District of Columbia's resident population at approximately 689,545 residents, which is comparable to the resident populations of Wyoming (576,851), Vermont (643,077), Alaska (733,391), and North Dakota (779,094); and

 

     WHEREAS, residents of the District of Columbia share all the responsibilities of United States citizenship, including paying more federal taxes than residents of twenty-two states, service on federal juries, and defending the United States as members of the United States Armed Forces in every war since the War for Independence, yet District of Columbia residents are denied full representation in Congress; and

 

     WHEREAS, the residents of the District of Columbia themselves have endorsed statehood for the District of Columbia and passed a District–wide referendum on November 8, 2016, which favored statehood by eighty-six percent; and

 

     WHEREAS, no other democratic nation denies the right of self–government, including participation in its national legislature, to the residents of its capital; and

 

     WHEREAS, the residents of the District of Columbia lack full democracy, equality, and citizenship enjoyed by the residents of the fifty states; and

 

     WHEREAS, the United States Congress repeatedly has interfered with the District of Columbia's limited self–government by enacting laws that affect the District of Columbia's expenditure of its locally raised tax revenue, including barring the usage of locally raised revenue, thus violating the fundamental principle that states and local governments are best suited to enact legislation that represents the will of their citizens; and

 

     WHEREAS, although the District of Columbia has passed consecutive balanced budgets since the 1997 fiscal year, it still faces the possibility of being shut down yearly because of Congressional deliberations over the federal budget; and

 

     WHEREAS, District of Columbia Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton and Delaware United States Senator Tom Carper reintroduced in the 117th Congress H.R. 51 and S. 51, respectively, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, that provides that the State of Washington, D.C. would have all the rights of citizenship as taxpaying American citizens, including two senators and at least one member of the House of Representatives; and

 

     WHEREAS, the United Nations Human Rights Committee has called on the United States Congress to address the District of Columbia's lack of political equality, and the Organization of American States has declared the disenfranchisement of the District of Columbia residents a violation of its charter agreement, to which the United States is a signatory; now, therefore,

 

     BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the Thirty-first Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2022, the House of Representatives concurring, that the members of the United States Congress are urged to enact federal legislation granting statehood to the people of Washington, D.C.; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the State of Hawaii supports admitting Washington, D.C., into the Union as a state of the United States of America; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the members of Hawaii's congressional delegation.

 

 

 

 

OFFERED BY:

_____________________________

 

 

Report Title: 

Washington, D.C.; Statehood; Federal Legislation

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