This Forum has often
remarked on the problem many Republicans have with democracy. When the voting is expected to go in their
favor they are all for it. When voting
is expected to go against them, they do everything they can to deny having a
vote at all. And when voters like low
income people and minorities are expected to vote against them they do everything they
can to discourage and prevent those people from voting.
Congress has large
powers over the local government of Washington D. C. In an act of unexpected non-generosity
Congress has allowed the District to have a single, non-voting member of
Congress, although what purpose that serves other than public relations is not
clear. One thing that members of
Congress do get to do though that might be relevant is testify
on bills that affect their local districts.
But members of Congress are often allowed to testify at hearings, apart
from any witness quota, if a bill specifically affects their districts.
The Republican member
of Congress who heads the committee that is involved with D. C. legislation
doesn’t like anyone to interfere with his rule.
So in hearings about an anti-abortion rights bill he refused to allow
the District’s sole non-voting Representative to testify.
D. C. Delegate Norton - Doesn't Have a Right to Vote Hm, Where Have We had That Before? |
Norton, who was also not allowed to speak on an
abortion measure last year, called it “the denial of a common courtesy” to a
fellow member.
And of course the Republican who is doing this is
totally unqualified to be involved with local District matters.
Rep. Trent Franks’s district in suburban Phoenix
is two time zones away from Washington, a fact not lost on D.C. leaders as the
Arizona Republican presided Thursday over the latest in a long series of
attempts to control social issues in the nation’s capital.
None of the testimony was going to matter because Republicans in the House were going to impose their own views on D. C. regardless of the positions of
the local residents, but it is another indication of how Republicans feel about
the rule of law, democracy and the role of citizens in the United States . Simply put, if you don’t agree with
Republicans then you have no role.
Well said, as usual, TDPE. Why oh why does the corporate media never actually cover democracy in inaction?
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