Leadership Conference on Civil Rights
Page 2
I will concentrate my brief remarks today on the denial of voting representation in the national
legislature of the United States for the approximately 600,000 residents of Washington, DC, the
capital city of my country. The issue of voting rights for the nation’s capital is a matter of
particular irony in a nation that prides itself on its democratic traditions, and yet is only one of a
very few countries that deny voting representation in their national legislature to residents of
their capital city. However, for purposes of this meeting, the real issue is the strong likelihood
that the racial make-up of our nation’s capital, which is majority African American, is a
significant factor in the ongoing denial of this basic democratic right,
Despite its young history as a nation, the struggle for equality in the United States is filled with
hard won victories and numerous setbacks. However, few areas are as contentious in this
turbulent history as the struggle for voting rights - the very right that makes it possible to defend
all our other rights – a right that many have protested, fought, and died to protect.
But for more than 200 years, the residents of our nation’s capital have been denied voting
representation in Congress. While D.C. residents were granted the right to vote for president in
1961,3 the right to voting representation in the Congress of the United States has remained out of
reach.
The question presented to this body is simple; “Why are the residents of our nation’s capital
denied voting representation in Congress and the same measure of home rule as other
Americans?” There appear to be two reasons for this anomaly. First, Washington, D.C. was
3
U.S. Constitution Amendment XXIII.