D.C. vote stalled over gun-law fight

Published: Tuesday, March 3, 2009 9:57 p.m. MST
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A clash over strict gun laws in the nation's capital has managed to shoot down, for at least a week, a bill that would give Utah a fourth U.S. House seat, and at the same time finally give Washington, D.C., a House seat with full voting rights.

The scuffle also has the D.C. City Council so miffed that it launched Tuesday an effort to study gaining statehood and greater independence over its own laws that would bring (not to mention two Senate seats also).

At issue is a move by conservatives to amend the bill to repeal D.C.'s strict gun laws, including repealing its ban on semiautomatic weapons. They say D.C. is infringing on residents' right to bear arms. The Senate last week added such an amendment to its version of the D.C. voting rights bill. D.C. officials hoped the House would not pass such an amendment, too, and force the Senate in negotiations to remove its gun amendment.

However, the House Rules Committee abruptly canceled a meeting it had scheduled for Tuesday in preparation to move the bill to the House floor on Wednesday, when it appeared guns' rights advocates had enough support to force a vote on a gun law amendment.

Senate Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said action on the bill would be delayed for at least the rest of the week. House GOP Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, criticized Democrats for trying to block the gun rights amendment vote.

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Meanwhile, the D.C. City Council passed a resolution Tuesday calling the gun rights amendment passed last week by the Senate "onerous and odious," and said D.C. itself should be allowed to make its own decisions on gun control and other matters.

It also formed a committee to look again into statehood, and all possible paths to achieve it. It charged members of that committee "to seek equality for D.C. residents, including full representation in both houses of Congress, through statehood."

City Council Chairman Vincent C. Gray said while D.C. is excited that the Senate passed the bill to give it a House seat, "We are troubled that gaining one right of self-determination may come at the price of another" because of the gun-control amendment. "I find this move to gut our gun laws through the voting rights bill extremely offensive," he said.

Gray added, "I ask: What will it take for the residents of the District of Columbia to be allowed in the club called the United States of America? We pay taxes — $600 million already paid this year — serve on juries, fight and die in wars, and still can't get into the club."

The bill would permanently expand the House by two members. One would go to the heavily Democratic D.C., and the other would go to heavily Republican Utah as a political counterweight.

Recent comments

The dirty little secret is this: The powers that be in DC would not...

Carl | March 29, 2009 at 5:42 a.m.

All of you who are calling us D.C. residents whiners need to research...

GetAClue | March 14, 2009 at 6:10 p.m.

We could build a fence around DC - and keep all our corrupted...

WatchDog | March 5, 2009 at 10:06 a.m.

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