DC residents pay every federal tax.
They have no vote in Congress.
Washington, DC is a federal district, not a state. The framers created it so that the seat of government would not sit inside any single state and depend on that state's protection. That was a reasonable design choice for a capital that was mostly empty land.
What the framers did not plan for is the city that grew up on top of it. Today more than 700,000 people live in DC permanently (U.S. Census). They pay federal income tax, payroll tax, Medicare, and Social Security. They serve on federal juries. They are drafted in every war. And they have no senators and no voting member of the House. The District has a single non-voting delegate — a member who can speak on the floor but cannot cast a recorded vote.
DC sends roughly $45 billion to the federal government each year — more than 26 states, including the combined total of Vermont, Wyoming, Alaska, North Dakota, and South Dakota (IRS Data Book, FY 2024). No other established democracy treats the residents of its capital this way.
The disenfranchisement was an act of Congress,
not a fact of nature.
In 1801, Congress passed the Organic Act, transferring jurisdiction over the new District from Maryland and Virginia to the federal government. DC residents had been voting as citizens of those states since the founding. After the transfer, they were not.
For the first sixty years, the city was small. Then DC grew up. By 1950 more than 800,000 people lived in the District (U.S. Census Bureau). They were families, homeowners, teachers, civil servants, and workers who had made DC their permanent home. They were not passing through. And they still had no vote.
The pattern that emerges from the historical record is consistent: every time DC residents pushed for representation, they got something. Not everything they asked for, but something. The progression from 1801 to today is not accidental — it is the result of organized residents winning concrete things that were, in their moment, considered politically dead.
Every right DC has, DC organized for.
Each was called impossible before it happened.
This is the part most national press leaves out. The history of DC voting rights is not a story of waiting. It is a story of organized residents winning concrete things, again and again, over more than two centuries.
-
1802Residents win back limited local suffrageThe Organic Act stripped the vote in 1801. Public outcry was immediate. Within a year Congress reinstated a limited franchise and an elected council for the city. It was not full representation. It was the first proof that Congress responds to organized DC residents.
-
1867Congress overrides a presidential veto to grant Black men in DC the vote — three years before the 15th AmendmentPresident Andrew Johnson vetoed the bill. Congress overrode him anyway. Black Washingtonians had real political power in the capital before anywhere else in the country. The backlash that followed in 1874, when Congress dissolved the territorial government, is part of the same story: DC's voting rights were taken because they had been used.
-
196123rd Amendment — DC wins the right to vote for presidentAfter 160 years, DC residents could finally vote in presidential elections. The campaign was driven by DC organizers and national civil rights groups. DC residents have cast electoral votes in every presidential election since 1964.
-
1970Congress creates a non-voting delegate seatFor the first time in nearly a century, DC had a voice in the House — limited, but real. In 1971, Walter Fauntroy became the first DC delegate in modern history. He used the seat to drive home rule, lobby for the 1978 voting rights amendment, and build the coalition the modern statehood movement still draws from.
-
1973Home Rule Act — first elected mayor and council in a centuryDC gained limited self-government for the first time since Reconstruction. Congress kept override authority, but DC residents got back the daily governance of their own city.
-
1978A DC voting rights constitutional amendment passes both chambers of CongressThe bar for a constitutional amendment is the highest in American politics. DC organizers, working with the League of Women Voters and a national coalition, cleared it. The amendment ratification fell short of the 38-state threshold before its deadline expired — but the federal political coalition was real.
-
1982DC voters ratify a state constitutionVoters approved the Constitution of the State of New Columbia in a citywide election. It is a complete state charter — bill of rights, legislature, executive, judiciary — drafted and approved by DC residents, ready for implementation if Congress acts.
-
201686% of DC voters approve statehood in the largest turnout in District historyNot a poll. A District-wide, government-administered referendum. The mandate is on the record. DC Board of Elections, 2016.
-
2020 & 2021The U.S. House of Representatives passes statehood — twiceH.R. 51, the Washington, DC Admission Act, cleared the House in June 2020 and again in April 2021. The Senate has not held a floor vote. That is the remaining gap.
-
2026199 House cosponsors. 43 Senate cosponsors. The case continues.The coalition is larger than at any prior point in the movement's history. League of Women Voters DC tracks current cosponsor counts for H.R. 51 and S. 51.
The lesson is not subtle. DC residents have organized before. They have won before. And the work is continuing.
Get updates on the campaign.
Capital Rights Lab works on public advocacy, organizing, and legal strategy for DC representation. If you want updates as the work develops, leave your email.
In 2026, America turns 250. The principle of consent of the governed is still not fully applied inside its own capital.
The Declaration of Independence declares governments derive "their just powers from the consent of the governed." The America 250 commemoration will play out across Washington, DC. Heads of state will join fireworks on the Mall. The Declaration will be read aloud at the Capitol. And 700,000 of the people who live and work in that city will still have no senator.
This is not a DC problem. It is an American problem. The credibility of American democracy abroad — and the integrity of its self-image at home — rests in part on whether the country applies its founding principles inside its own capital. Anniversaries focus attention, and attention is what unfinished business has always needed.
Statehood is the cleanest fix.
It is not the only one.
Full statehood — two senators, a voting House member — is the cleanest answer to a question that has been open since 1801. It is also a long fight that ultimately runs through the Senate.
In the meantime, much of what DC residents experience as federal overreach is not required by the Constitution at all. It is the product of ordinary statutes Congress passed and federal agencies that have grown into the gaps. The District Clause gives Congress authority over DC as the seat of the federal government — federal buildings, congressional security, the physical infrastructure of national government. It does not, by its own terms, require Congress to govern DC as a municipality: running the city's schools, deciding its zoning, prosecuting its local misdemeanors, or overriding its elected council.
Capital Rights Lab is building the legal case that those two things — legitimate federal authority over the seat of government, and unconstitutional federal overreach into DC's municipal life — can and should be separated. Recent Supreme Court decisions have opened new legal pathways to that argument that have never been applied to DC's situation. The doctrinal ground has not been tested in the post-2020 era. That is what the Lab is testing.
What you can do.
Statehood requires both chambers. H.R. 51 has passed the House twice. It has never received a Senate floor vote. Neither chamber's majority is permanent, so the count in both matters every Congress. Right now, 199 representatives cosponsor H.R. 51 and 43 senators cosponsor S. 51 (League of Women Voters DC). That gap is real, but it is the kind of gap movements close — with sustained pressure from constituents who keep showing up.
Every member of Congress has constituents who pay federal taxes and expect a vote. Telling your representative and your senators where you stand, clearly and by name, is the most useful thing any American who agrees with this case can do.
That is what the petition is for. It is not symbolic. It is a count. Every signature is a constituent on the public record. That record will make the next opening possible.
Sources and background
- League of Women Voters DC — DC Statehood Current cosponsor counts for H.R. 51 and S. 51
- DC Vote — Important Milestones Comprehensive timeline of DC voting rights history
- ACLU — DC Statehood Is a Racial Justice Issue History of disenfranchisement and its racial dimensions
- Brookings — The Politics and History of the DC Statehood Vote Congressional history of H.R. 51
- ACLU of DC — DC Home Rule Explained Overview of the Home Rule Act and its limits
- Forge Organizing — The History of the DC Statehood Movement Detailed organizing history including the 1802 and 1978 campaigns