The Constitution treats DC as a seat of government.
Congress treats it as a possession.
The District Clause — Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 — gives Congress the power to "exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever" over the seat of government. Courts have read that phrase as plenary power: near-unlimited federal authority over everything in the District.
This article argues that reading is wrong. The clause was written to secure a capital that no single state could hold hostage — a federal enclave for the functioning of the federal government. It was not written to strip 700,000 residents of the rights every other American holds.
Separate the federal interest
from the municipal overreach.
The article proposes replacing the plenary-power doctrine with a Bifurcation Test. It asks one question of every federal action in the District: is this protecting a legitimate federal interest, or is it simply governing a city?
A constitutional question
with a constitutional answer.
Most writing on DC's status treats it as a political problem awaiting a political fix. This article reframes it as a constitutional question — and lays the doctrinal groundwork for the next generation of DC self-governance litigation.
Capital Rights Lab pairs the doctrinal argument with an empirical record: a systematic review of federal court opinions showing how rarely courts have actually examined the limits of the District Clause. The scholarship and the evidence are built to be used together.