National
Review Online
Monday,
March 06, 2023
On Thursday,
President Biden reversed course and announced that he would sign a
bill rolling back the District of Columbia Council’s sweeping rewrite of its
criminal code — a measure so ill considered that it was opposed by Democratic
mayor Muriel Bowser and the liberal Washington Post editorial
board.
The Post warned in January, as the council
prepared to override the mayor’s veto, that the bill would make D.C. “a more
dangerous city” by decreasing “punishments for violent crimes such as
carjackings, home invasion burglaries, robberies and even homicides” and by
tying “the hands of police and prosecutors while overwhelming courts.”
That
warning was initially not enough to get the White House and the overwhelming
majority of House Democrats to abandon their obsession with D.C. “home rule.”
On February 6, the White House issued a veto threat decrying the “denial of
self-governance” in the federal district as “an affront to the democratic values
on which our Nation was founded.” A few days later, House Republicans, joined
by 31 House Democrats, passed a resolution disapproving of the new D.C.
criminal code.
The
House Democrats who voted against the House GOP’s resolution are now furious
with the Biden administration for indicating the bill would be vetoed. “The
White House f***ed this up royally,” one House Democrat told the Hill. “We are
being hung out to dry.”
The
obvious winners of Biden’s flip-flop are the law-abiding citizens of the
District of Columbia, congressional Republicans, and the congressional
Democrats who sided with them. The obvious losers are D.C.’s would-be
criminals, the 173 House Democrats who opposed the rollback, and advocates of
statehood for the District of Columbia.
Biden’s
capitulation is proof that he and many other Democrats don’t really believe
their rhetoric about statehood for D.C. “I support D.C. Statehood and home-rule
– but I don’t support some of the changes D.C. Council put forward over the
Mayor’s objections — such as lowering penalties for carjackings,” Biden tweeted
on Thursday. “If the Senate votes to overturn what D.C. Council did – I’ll sign
it.”
In other
words, Biden supports D.C. home rule — except on the most basic question of
criminal law. He supports D.C. statehood — which would allow local “defund the
police” Democrats to run amok in the federal district without federal
oversight.
While
Democratic support of statehood in the District of Columbia has always been
mostly about power politics — two extra Democratic votes in the Senate and an
extra Democratic vote in the House — there are principled reasons why the
Constitution gave Congress the power to “exercise exclusive Legislation in all
Cases whatsoever” in the federal district. First and foremost among these is
that the physical security of the federal government and its leadership is a
national, not just local, concern. Much of the impetus for creating a federal
capital district followed a 1783 riot that drove Congress out of Philadelphia
after the local government failed to protect it. Recent events — including the
January 6 riot, the arrest of an armed assassin outside the Maryland home of
Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh, and the attack in San Francisco on the
husband of then–House speaker Nancy Pelosi — underline the continuing
importance of the Founders’ worries.
“The
indispensable necessity of complete authority at the seat of government carries
its own evidence with it,” James Madison wrote in Federalist No.
43. “Without it, not only the public authority might be insulted and its
proceedings interrupted with impunity, but a dependence of the members of the
general government, on the State comprehending the seat of the government for
protection in the exercise of their duty might bring on the national councils
an imputation of awe or influence equally dishonorable to the government and
dissatisfactory to the other members of the Confederacy.”
Ensuring
the safety of the seat of government is the most basic reason why Congress has
constitutional authority over the federal district. The dangerous law enacted
by D.C.’s council is proof that Congress should not attempt to relinquish this
authority.
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