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Entries from DCist tagged with 'homerule>'

October 28, 2008

We thought that it would be close to impossible to dethrone Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Tex.) as the District's King of Hearts, for having said the scummiest thing related to D.C.'s non-voting status in Congress that we had ever heard. But ladies and gentlemen, we were wrong. Meet the new King: Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska). Young gave the following reaction to Anchorage Daily News reporter Lisa Demer upon hearing about his colleague Sen. Ted Stevens' conviction......

Continue Reading "D.C.'s New Congressional Hero: Rep. Don Young"

September 17, 2008

Legislation revising the District's gun regulations passed the House today in a 266-152 vote. From the AP:The bill, sponsored by Mississippi freshman Democrat Travis Childers, repeals the District's semiautomatic handgun ban and overturns D.C. law requiring that firearms kept in the home be locked up and inoperable. It allows D.C. residents to purchase guns from federally licensed dealers in Maryland and Virginia and repeals what critics claimed were burdensome registration requirements.Given that the D.C. Council......

Continue Reading "House Passes Gun Legislation"

July 24, 2008

They say that it's good to never give up, but would someone send Rep. Mark Souder (R-Ind.) a memo telling him that sometimes it's cool to throw in the towel? According to a press release issued yesterday by DC Vote, Souder is looking to re-introduce legislation that would do away with the District's gun laws. Didn't the Supreme Court recently rule that the city's gun ban was unconstitutional, and didn't the police recently start registering......

Continue Reading "Congress Moves to Strike D.C. Gun Laws; Wait, What?"

December 17, 2007

Hilda Mason, 91, who served more than 20 years on the D.C. Council, died yesterday at Washington Hospital Center. The Post has an obituary up (which perhaps unsurprisingly but a little creepily appears to have been largely written some time ago, as it notes at the bottom that one of its authors passed away in 2006), which details Mason's status as the grand dame of local D.C. politics, having served on the Board of Education,......

Continue Reading "Hilda Mason, 1916 - 2007"

December 6, 2007

Remember those billboards that popped up in the 1980s that counted up the national debt, dollar by dollar? Pretty scary, huh? Well, District voting rights activists want something similar for their cause. Today the D.C. Council held a hearing on legislation that would allow the city to place two large LED billboards -- one outside the John A. Wilson Building and the other outside the new Washington Nationals stadium -- that would display the amount......

Continue Reading "D.C. Council Debates Tax Payout Signs"

September 14, 2007

Marc Fisher: As the Senate gets ready to debate the District voting rights legislation, Fisher lists the dozen top reasons why senators from both parties should vote to enfranchise the city's residents. The more and more we look into it, the better the case looks. Let's hope the Senate agrees. Tom Knott: You know Knott's verbal insanity is in good form when the title of his weekly column is "It's Gathering of Eagles vs. nitwit......

Continue Reading "Weekly Columnist Roundup: Voting Rights"

August 13, 2007

Interesting story in today's Examiner, which tells the story of Logan Circle resident and dog owner Daniel Greenberg. Greenberg likes to let his dog off its leash inside Logan Circle, even though the practice is against city code. He was caught with his dog off-leash by an MPD officer back in May, and was actually arrested on criminal charges -- even though the D.C. Council has passed legislation that makes having a dog off its......

Continue Reading "Two Off-Leash Dog Laws Leads to Confusion, Arrest"

June 8, 2007

>> In case you missed this story in the Washington Post this morning, it seems another one of D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton's favorite long-term projects, expanding the District's Home Rule Charter to give the District budget and legislative autonomy, is actually getting some play up on the Hill. We can't even count how many times she's introduced bills like the two currently before the House, but it's been at least 15 years since Congress......

Continue Reading "Go Home Already: Free to be You and Me"

June 6, 2007

The D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics changed its tune yesterday and reversed an earlier decision by stating that Mayor Adrian M. Fenty's school takeover plan cannot be the subject of a referendum. Once again, it comes down to the Home Rule Charter: attorneys for the election board said in papers filed yesterday that because Congress and President Bush have approved an amendment to the city's Home Rule Charter that gives the mayor direct control......

Continue Reading "No Referendum on School Takeover Plan"

May 29, 2007

Last week we told you about the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics' decision to approve D.C. resident Mary Spencer's petition to try to place Mayor Fenty's school takeover plan, which amends the District's Home Rule Charter to give the mayor direct control of the school system, on a special election ballot in August. Now an article in today's Washington Times ">quotes Spencer accusing the mayor's office of delaying filing their expected appeal, which would......

Continue Reading "Referendum Petitioners Accuse Fenty of Delay Tactics"

May 24, 2007

Yesterday we told you about the referendum petition approved by the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics regarding Mayor Adrian Fenty's school takeover legislation, which recently passed the U.S. Senate. The petition was filed by D.C. resident Mary Spencer, who is seeking to put Fenty's school plan on a special election ballot so that D.C. residents could vote on the issue directly. Today, the WaPo's David Nakamura clarifies an issue that was speculated about......

Continue Reading "Potential Referendum Could Delay School Takeover"

May 22, 2007

Well that was fast. After placing a second hold on legislation granting Mayor Adrian Fenty direct control over the District's public schools, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) this afternoon agreed to lift her hold and let the proposal move forward in the Senate. According to the Post, Landrieu did so after being assured that School Board President Robert Bobb (pictured right), who had asked for the hold, and Fenty had agreed to sit down and iron......

Continue Reading "Landrieu Lifts Hold on School Takeover Legislation"

May 22, 2007

Two senators, two holds on District legislation -- sounds like business as usual up on Capitol Hill, doesn't it? The Post brings news that Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) became the second Democratic senator to put a hold on the legislation that would formalize Mayor Adrian Fenty's bid for increased control over the city's troubled public schools. Two weeks ago, Sen. Benjamin Cardin (D-Md.) used the same tactic to force the District to negotiate over the......

Continue Reading "Please Hold, D.C."

May 9, 2007

Yesterday the WashTimes ran a story on a bill being introduced by D.C. Council member Jim Graham that would give budgetary oversight of the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority to the D.C. CEO CFO, Natwar Gandhi. This morning, the WaPo follows up with a story comparing the bill to Fenty's school takeover plan -- essentially the WASA board, much like the D.C. school board, would become mere advisors to their own budget process, while Gandhi's......

Continue Reading "WASA Could Lose Control of its Budget"

April 20, 2007

Happy Friday, D.C. It's sunny out, this weekend is apparently going to be gorgeous (72 degrees!), and on Thursday, the D.C. Voting Rights Act passed the House of Representatives. In order to avoid a repeat of last time, Democrats broke the voting rights measure into two bills -- one that would add the extra seats in the house and the other a PAY-GO bill to fund them. They were both written so narrowly that Republicans......

Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Voting Rights Passes Edition"

April 19, 2007

Last time we live blogged the House debate on District voting rights, things didn't go too well. We're hoping for a bit of an improvement today. From what we've heard on the Hill, debate kicks off at 10:30 a.m., and the legislation has been split up into two separate parts -- one covering the actual voting seats both D.C. and Utah would receive and the other dealing with the minor increase in annual spending the......

Continue Reading "Live Blogging the Voting Rights Debate: Round 2"

April 2, 2007

Well, it's Monday again and it seems the malaise caused by Georgetown's Saturday loss has subsided a bit. A dash of cherry blossoms and a pinch of kite festival always helps mend a broken heart. At least some Georgetown fans are finding a bit of solace in their prospects for next year. Solace came in another form at a Sunday mass for supporters and students in Atlanta when the presiding priest said, "I must admit,......

Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Take Me Out Edition"

January 25, 2007

Thanks to the hard work of voting rights activists, a few Congressional allies, and the wisdom of the American people in November, the District is coming closer and closer to finally gaining some voting representation. Legislation to grant the District a voting seat in the House looks like it's moving forward, D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton can once again vote on amendments on the House floor, and D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty has started asking aides......

Continue Reading "Cookies, Coke and Voting Rights"

January 5, 2007

Good morning to you, D.C. It may be raining, but temperatures will hover somewhere between the upper 50s and the lower 60s today, if you can believe that, so no need for a heavy coat. The rain will be gone by tomorrow, in plenty of time for all of us to safely head over to Mayor Adrian Fenty's Inaugural Ball. DCist will be there, and not just for a chance to snap some hilarious photos......

Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Friday's Alright for Fighting Edition"

January 2, 2007

Now that's what we call efficiency. Not six hours after being officially sworn-in as the District's fifth elected mayor since Home Rule, Adrian Fenty's presence is already being felt on the city's official homepage. Gone is the image of former Mayor Anthony Williams atop the page, as is his "Mayor's Welcome." Both have been replaced by Fenty. Williams' blog is also gone, though it won't soon be missed -- it's last entry was dated March......

Continue Reading "Fenty Finally Becomes Mayor"

August 22, 2006

It goes without saying -- the District is a town full of Democrats. They occupy the majority of the elected offices, have the most registered voters by a long shot, and reliably vote for Democratic presidential candidates. In the most recent analysis of the voter registry, the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics reported that 73.5 percent of registered voters were Democrats. Republicans could only claim 8 percent, the Statehood Green Party 1.6 percent, and......

Continue Reading "The 'Other' Candidates"

May 16, 2006

If there is one thing that elected officials know, it's that they probably won't get rich while they remain in government. Well, unless they swindle the taxpayers of loads of money and jet off to a country that has no extradition treaty with the U.S., of course. But that notwithstanding, how much are certain elected officials really making? And is it enough, or is it too much? Today The Common Denominator, an independent local newspaper,......

Continue Reading "How Much is Being Mayor Worth?"

February 23, 2006

Various candidates for public office in the District maintain blogs. Adrian Fenty has one, Michael Brown claims to have one, and Marie Johns is trying to get hers off the ground. The most active of the bunch, though, is A. Scott Bolden, who is currently challenging Council-member Phil Mendelson for his coveted At Large seat. Bolden has been blogging off and on since late October, and has used his online perch to comment on everything......

Continue Reading "Bolden Blogs on Blogs"

December 18, 2005

On Sundays, DCist publishes opinion pieces about life in D.C. The views expressed below are solely those of the author. I have lived on Capitol Hill since 1992, and the only thing that I do not like about living in this city is my so-called voting rights. I wish that the government would take them back. The lines of the federal district were drawn in 1791, but the people who lived here continued to vote......

Continue Reading "Opinionist: Take My Representation, Please"

November 16, 2005

Almost two weeks ago a federal appeals court ruled that a District attempt to impose a commuter tax on the legions of out-of-towners who make their living within the city's borders was unlawful, a violation of the powers of the U.S. Congress to oversee and regulate the District's affairs. While the decision wasn't unexpected -- after all, like it or not, the District is fundamentally a Congressional colony -- it dealt another blow to the......

Continue Reading "Commuter Tax Measures Introduced"

October 3, 2005

Last Thursday D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams finally ended the speculation as to his plans for 2006 -- he announced he would not run for a third term. But while his decision finally provides some clarity for the current crop of mayoral contenders -- they no longer have to live with the election-altering specter of Williams vying for the job again -- it also provides the current mayor the powerful opportunity to endorse a successor. The......

Continue Reading "Who Will Williams Endorse?"

August 5, 2005

Fall catalogs are quickly cramming our mailbox and "Back to Cool" commercials are again making schoolchildren cringe, but the frizz-inducing weather reminds us with a humid slap each morning that it's still summer. Celebrate the sweaty mess that is a D.C. summer at the Midcity Dog Days of August, a sidewalk sale and festival spanning the U and 14th Street NW corridors this Saturday and Sunday. More than 50 businesses are participating in the sixth......

Continue Reading "Best in Show: Dog Days of August"

August 5, 2005

Yesterday DCist broke the news that Rep. Henry Bonilla, a Texas Republican, was looking to rename 16th Street NW after Ronald Reagan -- adding one more dedication for the nation's 40th president to the 67 that already exist in 24 states. Word spread fast -- before the end of the day, Rep. Tom Davis III (R-Va.), whose committee would review the legislative proposal, encouraged Bonilla to "name anything else he has to look at his......

Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Oh Henry! Edition"

July 27, 2005

Close to 200 people gathered last night in the auditorium of the Shaw Junior High School along Rhode Island Avenue NW for a townhall meeting titled "Save DC Gun Safety Laws: Why Congress Should Leave These DC Laws to DC Residents & Elected Officials." Attended by D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams, Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, and Chief Ramsey, pictured at right, the meeting focused on the repeated attempts by Congress to overturn the District's restrictive three-decade......

Continue Reading "Townhall Meeting Discusses District Gun Laws"

July 11, 2005

Do you fear that the District will become more dangerous if its gun laws are relaxed, as legislation moving through the Senate currently contemplates? Are you angry that a Senator from Texas is trying to impose her pro-gun beliefs on a city that did not elect her nor can remove her from office? Does your status as a District resident leave you unrepresented and disgruntled with the state American democracy? If you answered yes to......

Continue Reading "Supporting District Gun Laws, Online"
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