Christensen: It did not impact me as far as the trial went. However, only being about six blocks from the police department, I could hear everything. When I came home, I could hear the helicopters flying over my house… I could hear the flash bangs going off. If I stepped outside, I could see the smoke from the grenades. One day, the trial ran a little late, and I had trouble getting to my house, because the protesters were blocking the interstate, so I had to go way around. I was aware, but it did not affect me at all.

Source Article from https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/george-floyd/derek-chauvin-trial-alternate-juror-lisa-christensen/89-97b74eb1-c875-4ed5-93ad-5c72620b9f18

China’s Xi Jinping, the first national leader to speak at Thursday’s summit, reiterated the nation’s pledge to “strive to peak carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060.” On coal consumption, Xi said China might “phase it down” during its 15th Five Year Plan, which runs from 2025 through 2030. The Chinese leader also said his country, which is responsible for nearly a third of the world’s emissions, would strictly control coal power projects in the years ahead.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2021/04/22/biden-climate-summit/

The jurors who held the fate of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in their hands took their job so seriously that to protect the process they didn’t learn one another’s names, jobs, family ties or personal interests.

They came from various backgrounds and spanned five decades in age but somehow came to an unspoken understanding early in their three weeks together that they would limit conversation to the weather, a shortage of Cheetos at their snack table and their pizza orders every Wednesday, said Lisa Christensen, who served as an alternate juror in the case.

“We didn’t want to do or say anything to jeopardize this process … so we were very careful. We were responsible. We took it seriously,” said Christensen. “I felt everybody was coming from a good place, a good heart. I felt everyone was genuine. I don’t think there were any ulterior motives at all.”

Christensen first recounted her impressions to CBS News and said she is sharing her experience because it’s an untold part of the story that adds transparency to the jury process.

Christensen said she was “sad and disappointed” when she was excused Monday afternoon before deliberations began but agreed with the verdicts the jury reached Tuesday after about nine hours and 45 minutes of deliberations — guilty of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the May 25 killing of George Floyd.

“I felt [Chauvin] was guilty,” she said, adding that a bystander’s video of the incident and prosecution witnesses overpowered the defense’s inability to deliver on claims that Floyd died of heart issues and a drug overdose.

The 56-year-old Brooklyn Center resident hadn’t closely followed news of Floyd’s murder last year in south Minneapolis. She had seen short clips of the bystander video a few times on the local news.

She was summoned for jury duty late last year and in December received a thick, 16-page juror questionnaire in the mail. Christensen flipped the first page open and saw the names of the four officers who arrested Floyd and who were charged in his death — Derek Michael Chauvin, Tou Thao, Thomas Kiernan Lane, J. Alexander Kueng.

“You got to be kidding me,” she said she thought to herself. “This can’t be happening.”

She put the packet down on her dresser and walked away. The gravity of the situation was too much. Two weeks passed before she could look at it again. It took another week of fits and starts for her to complete the questionnaire.

By the time jury selection began three months later on March 8, Christensen was confident her number — juror 96 of 326 empaneled for the trial — wouldn’t come up. The court needed only 14 jurors, she thought.

But as the second week of jury selection came to a close, Christensen was called to the witness stand and pressed by attorneys for an hour on her thoughts on the case, Black Lives Matter and racial bias in the criminal justice system, among other topics.

“I feel like [Chauvin] took a different role in the situation versus the other officers,” she told the court during jury selection. “More like the leader.”

Ultimately, a jury of nine women and five men were seated; six were people of color and eight were white.

Christensen said the worldwide attention focused on the case initially made her concerned about her role and possible backlash. But, she added, she didn’t believe she or her fellow jurors would have been influenced by such issues in their deliberations.

“I know you can’t please everybody,” Christensen said. “We just wanted to get it right; that was the priority. That was the focus and that was the agenda.”

The jurors’ safety was of such concern that per a judge’s order, they secretly met with Hennepin County sheriff’s deputies at different locations and were driven to the courthouse in downtown Minneapolis, where 10 to 15 armed National Guard members greeted them at a fenced-off entrance to an underground parking garage.

They heard from 44 witnesses over 14 days of testimony that began March 29. Early testimony from several witnesses who saw Floyd die and pleaded with the officers to relent — including a child, three teenage girls and one teenage boy — was especially hard, Christensen said.

Christensen still can’t shake the testimony of Darnella Frazier, who was 17 when she recorded the video of Floyd’s arrest that became key to the prosecution’s case, and Frazier’s then 9-year-old cousin, Judeah Reynolds.

“To this day it’s still in my mind that [Frazier is] … apologizing to Mr. Floyd at night because she can’t go to sleep,” Christensen said. “It’s pretty heartbreaking. The 9-year-old, I could feel her sadness.”

There were several moments during such testimony where jurors retired to a locked room guarded by a deputy and, overcome by emotion, cast their eyes downward to avoid eye contact and waited in complete silence until their return to the courtroom.

“While we were in there it was just us, you know?” Christensen said. “I feel like even though we didn’t talk about it, I felt like we were supported by one another, gained strength. … It was a good group.”

Frazier’s video was integral to the state’s case, she said, adding that the testimony of prosecution witness Dr. Martin Tobin was crucial to establishing that Floyd died of asphyxia while Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck for nine minutes and 29 seconds.

“It never got any easier no matter how many times we saw it,” she said of the video. “I still felt the pain I thought Mr. Floyd was going through. I never understood it any better from the first time I saw it to the last time I saw it.”

Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, was unable to raise doubts about the state’s case or show that Floyd died of a cardiac arrest affected by drug use, or that Chauvin’s actions were reasonable, Christensen said.

The trial consumed Christensen’s life. After listening to testimony all day and taking notes on a legal pad that remained in the courthouse, she returned home to rewrite notes by hand about each day’s witness. Under an entry for 19-year-old Christopher Martin, the Cup Foods cashier who reported Floyd’s use of an alleged fake $20 bill that led to the police being called, Christensen, who used to work in retail management, wrote: “I could feel his guilt. … And it’s heartbreaking knowing this young kid feels responsible.”

A week before she was excused from the trial, a police officer in her city fatally shot 20-year-old Daunte Wright during a traffic stop after firing a gun when she apparently meant to use her Taser. Christensen watched as smoke from police flash-bang grenades rose into the air about a mile from her home. She listened as hundreds of protesters chanted in the distance.

She was running errands Tuesday afternoon when she heard the jury had reached a verdict. She rushed home to watch the announcement on TV.

“I was like, ‘Wow, they really found him guilty on all three charges,’ ” she said. “I was kind of shocked. I trusted them. I know they worked really well together to come to that conclusion. I knew they had what it took to get the job done.”

Christensen, who is white, never imagined herself here — thinking more critically about police reform and racial discrimination in the United States. For the first time, she had difficult but revelatory conversations about race with her roommate, a Black man she has known since she was 18.

Sometime in the next few days, she vowed, she will make her way for the first time to 38th Street and Chicago Avenue, where George Floyd begged for his life, and pay her respects. And in her mind she quietly hopes he’s proud of the 14 strangers who gathered in a nearly deserted building locked behind concrete barricades and barbed wire to hear his story and reach a historic decision that reverberated around the world.

Staff writer Paul Walsh contributed to this report.

Chao Xiong • 612-270-4708

Twitter: @ChaoStrib

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/chauvin-trial-was-life-changing-says-alternate-juror/600049142/

South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott will give the Republican response to President Biden’s joint address to Congress on Wednesday.

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South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott will give the Republican response to President Biden’s joint address to Congress on Wednesday.

Al Drago/AFP via Getty Images

South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott will deliver the Republican response to President Biden’s address to a joint session of Congress next week, delivering a message Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said will be directed at “working Americans.”

“As Sen. Scott likes to say, he is living his mother’s American dream, and he has dedicated his career to creating more opportunity for our fellow citizens who need it most. Nobody is better at communicating why far-left policies fail working Americans,” the Kentucky Republican said in a statement.

Scott is the chamber’s lone Black Republican, and he is central to discussions about possible policing legislation — a position of renewed importance in the wake of former Minneapolis police officer Derek’s Chauvin’s murder conviction this week.

“We face serious challenges on multiple fronts, but I am as confident as I have ever been in the promise and potential of America,” Scott said in a statement. “I look forward to having an honest conversation with the American people and sharing Republicans’ optimistic vision for expanding opportunity and empowering working families.”

Biden delivers his first presidential address to Congress on Wednesday night.

In theory, delivering the opposing party’s response is a high honor. But in practice, many who’ve been tasked with the role in recent years have found their political growth stunted after the highly watched event.

While the speaking slot is inarguably an opportunity for a politician to introduce themselves to a wider audience and curry favor with party leadership, the brighter spotlight — with visuals that are tough to compare to a congressional address — often leads to harsher scrutiny, sometimes outweighing the benefits.

Scott follows in the footsteps of other Republican responders, including former congressman and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell and former Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley.

But Scott — a Black Republican from the Deep South, who gave a notable speech at last year’s Republican National Convention — has long maneuvered contradicting expectations.

And he may have little to lose politically. Scott has said his 2022 reelection bid will be his last political race.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/22/989993117/republican-sen-tim-scott-will-deliver-gop-response-to-biden-address

By Trump’s preferred metric — the stock market — Biden is outperforming his predecessor at this stage of his presidency. Last summer, the Republican said stock values would “collapse” under Biden. But through Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average was up nearly 16 percent since Nov. 7, when the Democrat was declared the apparent election winner, compared with a 10.5 percent gain over a similar period following Trump’s election.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2021/04/22/trump-biden-economy-depression/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/04/22/daunte-wright-funeral-al-sharpton-brooklyn-center-minneapolis/7317436002/

Admitting Washington D.C. to the Union as the 51st state is “not realistic” unless Senate Democrats are able to make “the filibuster go by the wayside,” Fox News chief political anchor Bret Baier told “The Story” Thursday. 

“The argument for D.C. to be a state has been around for a long time. It was voted through in the House last June … but fell short in the Senate,” Baier explained. “There have been people in D.C. who say it is taxation without representation. [Congressional delegate] Eleanor Holmes Norton is a shadow congresswoman, but she doesn’t have a vote on the floor, [though] she can be in committees. There are no senators represented in the Senate.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has claimed that denying the District of Columbia statehood is “unjust, unequal and undemocratic,” while Rep. Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y., called opposition to the idea “racist.” On the Republican side, Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, called the move a “pure power grab” by Democrats.

“Republicans say, on substance, that’s what the Founders wanted … to have this place that was not a state to be the center of government,” Baier added. “They believe this is all about trying to keep hold of power for Democrats that have a slim hold right now.”

HOUSE PASSES BILL TO MAKE WASHINGTON DC THE 51ST STATE

Host Martha MacCallum noted the push was a consequence of Donald Trump losing the 2020 presidential election: “At that point [prior to November] all of those things seemed far away and radical, frankly. We’re watching them tick off that list, or attempt to, one at a time.”

The “Special Report” anchor maintained he thought the legislation would again die in the Senate.

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“This is the first in a series of bills that the House is going to move, including H.R. 1, to kind of bombard [Sen. Joe] Manchin, {D-W. Va.] and [Sen. Kyrsten] Sinema [D-Ariz.] and anybody who’s preventing the filibuster from going by the wayside [and] say ‘you’re not giving representation’ to the point that you wear them down and somehow, someway they relent on some big bill. 

“I don’t think it’s going to happen, but I think that’s the strategy.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/bret-baier-washington-dc-51st-state-not-realistic

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping called Thursday for countries to work together, while respecting their different responsibilities on reducing carbon emissions. Xi made the remarks at a U.S.-led climate summit.

The Chinese leader’s roughly five-minute remarks via video conference were the first from the leader of a single country, following opening remarks from U.S. President Joe Biden and his administration. The U.N. secretary general also spoke at the event. Biden invited 40 global leaders to the two-day summit, which is set to conclude Friday.

Reducing carbon emissions is one of the few areas China and the U.S. have said they could cooperate on. It also aligns with Xi’s announcement last year that the Asian nation aims to reach peak carbon emissions by 2030. The two countries are the world’s largest carbon emitters.

“We must be committed to multilateralism,” Xi said as his fifth point in his brief remarks, of which an official translation from the Chinese was streamed online by the White House.

Xi’s sixth point was commitment “to the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities.” He said developed countries should increase their ambitions on addressing climate issues, while helping less-developed nations speed up their shift to low carbon growth.

The Chinese leader then pointed to a joint statement the U.S. and China released over the weekend on how the two countries would work together to “tackle the climate crisis.” The statement followed two days of talks in Shanghai between U.S. special envoy for climate John Kerry and his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua.

“China looks forward to working with the international community, including the United States, to jointly advance global environmental governance,” Xi said.

Since taking office in January, Biden has called China the “most serious competitor” to the U.S. as he maintains former President Donald Trump’s tough stance on Beijing.

Xi and Biden spoke by phone in February, just ahead of China’s Spring Festival.

On Thursday, Xi said China would “strictly control coal-fired generation projects” and limit increases in coal consumption over the next five years, with a phase down in the following five years.

New energy vehicles and “green” transportation will be an important next area for communication and cooperation between the U.S. and China, special envoy Xie said at a press conference following Xi’s remarks.

He said while China leads in new energy vehicles, the U.S. has lots of good tech and there’s a need to discuss for more cooperation in technology.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/22/chinas-xi-calls-for-international-collaboration-to-reduce-global-carbon-emissions.html

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/04/22/covid-19-hate-crime-bill-protect-asian-americans-passes-senate/7290109002/

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WJW/AP) — A neighbor of Ma’Khia Bryant says, after watching video captured by his security cameras, he thinks more people could have died if police hadn’t acted quickly in the incident.

That’s according to an interview with The Columbus Dispatch, which quoted Donovan Brinson as saying “It was violent and all just happened so fast.”

Bryant, 16, was shot and killed by an officer on the east side of Columbus Tuesday evening.

Police body camera footage showed the teen swinging a knife toward two other girls before the fatal shots were fired.

Brinson told The Columbus Dispatch that he was pulling into his driveway as the incident started. He said he “figured it was just a girl fight.” He said the fight got worse and that, while he was inside, he heard gunshots after police responded.

He then reviewed 26 seconds of video from his cameras, the paper reports. He said it showed the fight and he saw the knife involved. He turned the video over to police.

The 10-second police body camera clip begins with the officer, identified Wednesday as Nicholas Reardon, getting out of his car at the home.

The officer, who was hired by the force in December 2019, is seen taking a few steps toward a group of people in the driveway when Bryant starts swinging a knife wildly at another girl or woman, who falls backward. The officer shouts several times to get down.

Bryant then charges at another girl or woman, who is pinned against a car.

From a few feet away, with people on either side of him, the officer fires four shots, and Bryant slumps to the ground. A black-handled blade similar to a kitchen knife or steak knife lies on the sidewalk next to her.

A man immediately yells at the officer, “You didn’t have to shoot her! She’s just a kid, man!”

The officer responds, “She had a knife. She just went at her.”

Bryant was taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead, police said. Police did not say if anyone else was injured.

Source Article from https://fox8.com/news/neighbor-of-teen-shot-by-columbus-police-says-more-people-could-have-died-if-police-didnt-act-fast/

Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, a leading Black conservative and rising Republican star, will deliver his party’s formal rebuttal to President Biden’s joint address to Congress next week.

Mr. Scott was chosen for the task by his party’s top congressional leaders, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, at a time when Republicans are seeking to expand their appeal to nonwhite groups that have traditionally voted Democratic. In a party still divided over the legacy of former President Donald J. Trump, Mr. Scott is also a rare figure able to unite competing factions.

“He is one of the most inspiring and unifying leaders in our nation,” Mr. McConnell said in a statement announcing the decision on Thursday. “As Senator Scott likes to say, he is living his mother’s American dream, and he has dedicated his career to creating more opportunity for our fellow citizens who need it most. Nobody is better at communicating why far-left policies fail working Americans.”

Mr. Biden is expected to use much of his address, his first before Congress since being inaugurated, to build public support for his multi-trillion-dollar jobs and infrastructure plans. Republicans fiercely oppose the proposals as too expensive and too intrusive, and it will be up to Mr. Scott to make their case.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/22/us/politics/tim-scott-biden.html

“During the first phase of coronavirus, the average here was eight to 10, one day it reached 18. But today the situation is very bad. Last night we cremated 78 bodies,” Jitender Singh Shunty, who runs a crematorium in northeast Delhi, told Reuters.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-56851265

Leaders of countries like Brazil, Canada and Japan made commitments on Thursday to curb domestic greenhouse gas emissions and tackle climate change during President Joe Biden‘s climate summit.

The pledges come shortly after Biden vowed to reduce U.S. emissions by at least 50% by 2030, more than doubling the country’s prior commitment under the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

The president convened the summit to urge global cooperation on climate change. “It’s an encouraging start,” Biden told world leaders during the summit. “We’re really beginning to make some real progress.”

In a split from his past attitude toward climate change, Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro vowed to end illegal deforestation in the country by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.

Bolsonaro has previously criticized protections of the country’s forests and threatened to withdraw from the Paris accord. Brazil has asked the Biden administration to provide $1 billion to pay for conservation efforts in the Amazon rainforest.

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said the country will pledge to curb emissions by 46% by 2030 compared with 2013 levels. Japan, the world’s fifth largest emitter, previously committed to a 26% reduction, a goal that was criticized as insufficient.

“Japan is ready to demonstrate its leadership for worldwide decarbonization,” Suga said at the summit. Like the U.S., Japan has pledged to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau vowed that Canada will slash emissions 40% to 45% by 2030 compared with 2005 levels, a major increase from its previous pledge of 30%.

“We will continually strengthen our plan and take even more actions on our journey to net zero by 2050,” Trudeau said during the summit.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi didn’t provide a new target but re-confirmed the country’s vow to install 450 gigawatts of renewable energy by 2030.

Modi also announced an India-U.S. Climate and Clean Energy Agenda Partnership for 2030. India is the world’s third largest emitter behind China and the U.S.

Russia President Vladimir Putin broadly pledged to “significantly” reduce the country’s emissions in the next three decades and said Russia makes a big contribution in absorbing global carbon dioxide.

Putin also said the country has nearly halved its emissions compared to 1990 and called for a global reduction of methane, a greenhouse gas that is 84 times more potent than carbon dioxide and a main driver of climate change.

“The fate of our entire planet, the development prospects of each country, the well-being and quality of life of people largely depend on the success of these efforts,” Putin said at the summit.

China’s President Xi Jinping re-affirmed commitments to peak emissions before 2030 and go carbon neutral by 2060. The U.S. and China have agreed to cooperate on climate change despite division on issues like trade and human rights.

South Korea President Moon Jae In said that Korea will end public financing of coal-fired power plants overseas and plans to unveil a stronger emissions reduction pledge.

Some countries praised Biden for hosting the summit and bringing the U.S. back into the Paris accord. Former President Donald Trump‘s administration exited the agreement and halted all federal efforts to reduce emissions.

“I’m delighted to see that the United States is back to work together with us in climate politics, because there can be no doubt about the world needing your contribution,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said at the summit.

Nations under the Paris agreement are set to unveil updated emissions targets for the next decade at the U.N. climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, in November.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/22/biden-climate-summit-2021-what-brazil-japan-canada-others-pledged.html

Only Senator Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, opposed the legislation, arguing that it mandated an overly expansive collection of data around hate crimes that could slide into government overreach.

Democrats defeated a roster of amendments proposed by Republicans, including one aimed at banning federal funds for universities that discriminate against Asian-Americans — something that is already unlawful. Another would have required a report on how the government had enforced restrictions on gatherings for religious worship during the pandemic, and a third would have prohibited the Justice Department from tracking cases of discrimination that did not rise to the level of a crime. Ms. Hirono dismissed the amendments as “damaging” and partisan.

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Legislative efforts and debates around the spike of violence targeting Asian-Americans have not always proceeded with such bipartisan comity. In sometimes heated exchanges, some Democratic lawmakers have accused Republicans of supporting and echoing President Donald J. Trump’s racist talk around the pandemic, including calling the coronavirus “Kung Flu.” Republicans, in turn, have accused Democrats of engaging in overreaching political correctness, and have countered that Democrats are more interested in attacking their messaging than in addressing violence.

After Representative Chip Roy of Texas, one of the top Republicans on the judiciary panel, used his introductory remarks at a hearing in March on anti-Asian discrimination to issue a lengthy condemnation of the Chinese government’s handling of the coronavirus and asserted that Democrats were “policing” free speech, he was met with fiery blowback.

“Your president, and your party, and your colleagues can talk about issues with any other country that you want, but you don’t have to do it by putting a bull’s-eye on the back of Asian-Americans across this country, on our grandparents, on our kids,” said Representative Grace Meng, Democrat of New York.

“This hearing was to address the hurt and pain of our community, to find solutions,” she added, “and we will not let you take our voice away from us.”

Experts testifying before the panel told lawmakers that such language had contributed to an atmosphere of increased animus against Asian-Americans. Attacks targeting Asian-Americans — many of them women or older people — have increased nearly 150 percent in the past year, the experts said.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/22/us/politics/senate-anti-asian-hate-crimes.html

The divided House Thursday passed legislation to make Washington, D.C., the 51st state and to grant its more than 700,000 residents full representation in Congress.

The strictly party-line vote in the House was 216 to 208, with all Republicans rejecting the statehood bill, dubbed H.R. 51. The legislation has support from President Biden but faces long odds of passing in the 50-50 split Senate.

Debate over statehood got particularly heated on the House floor Thursday when New York Democrat Rep. Mondaire Jones accused certain Republicans of being against D.C. statehood because the district was not White enough in their minds to qualify for self-rule. 

Rep. Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y., speaks before the Supreme Court on April 15, 2021, on his legislation to expand the Supreme Court.

“I have had enough of my colleagues’ racist insinuations that somehow that people of Washington, D.C., are incapable or even unworthy of our democracy,” Jones said in a floor speech that drew a quick rebuke from Republicans. “One Senate Republican said that D.C. wouldn’t be a ‘well-rounded, working-class state.’ I had no idea there were so many syllables in the word White.”

D.C. is 46% Black and 46% White, according to 2019 Census estimates.

Jones continued: “One of my House Republican colleagues said that D.C. shouldn’t be a state because the district doesn’t have a landfill. My goodness, with all the racist trash my colleagues have brought to this debate, I can see why they’re worried about having a place to put it.”

Republicans immediately asked for Jones’ words to be struck, and the freshman Democrat ultimately agreed to withdraw his statements. 

Prior to that dustup on the floor, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., cheered the statehood passage as a “momentous day for American democracy.” Democrats argued statehood was a matter of civil rights and a necessary step to right a historic injustice of taxing D.C. residents without affording them any representation in Congress. 

HOUSE DEMS READY TO PASS DC STATEHOOD THURSDAY, CALL ON SENATE TO END FILIBUSTER TO DO SAME

“Statehood for the District of Columbia is about showing respect for our democracy,” Pelosi said.

“It’s well past the time to grant them the rights that they have been fighting for and that they deserve,”  she added.

The Capitol is seen in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2021. 
(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Republicans, however, argued that because Washington, D.C.’s establishment is constitutionally based, any change to the district must come in the form of a constitutional amendment – not legislation from Congress. And the GOP panned statehood as a power grab by Democrats to expand the majority in the Senate by adding two more senators from a liberal enclave.

“Let’s be clear what H.R. 51 is all about: It’s about Democrats adding two new progressive U.S. senators to push a radical agenda championed by the Squad to reshape America into the socialist utopia they always talk about,” said Rep. James Comer, R-Ky.

BIDEN WHITE HOUSE OFFICIALLY SUPPORTS MAKING DC THE 51ST STATE

D.C. statehood already passed the House last June but it died in the GOP-led Senate. The chances of becoming law are better now with supportive Democrats in charge of both the Senate and White House, but the Senate remains the biggest challenge because of the legislative filibuster that requires 60 votes to advance legislation. 

But many Democrats in the House, including Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., are demanding the Senate get rid of the filibuster so the statehood legislation could pass with a simple majority vote.

However, not all 50 Democrats in the Senate have embraced D.C. statehood.

Activists hold signs as they take part in a rally in support of DC statehood near the US Capitol in Washington, DC on March 22, 2021. – Democrats emboldened by their control of the US House, Senate and White House launched a fresh push Monday for statehood for the nation’s capital Washington, beginning with a high-profile congressional hearing addressing the issue. 
(MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., is leading the statehood charge in the upper chamber and his legislation has garnered 44 members of the Democratic caucus as co-sponsors. Sens. Angus King, I-Maine, Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., Krysten Sinema, D-Ariz., Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., and Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., are not yet on board. 

HOUSE COMMITTEE ADVANCES DC STATEHOOD BILL ALONG PARTY-LINE VOTE

Led by Mayor Muriel Bowser and D.C.’s delegate in Congress, Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C. officials have pushed hard for statehood. The license plates of D.C. residents are a protest to their status, reading: “End Taxation Without Representation.” 

Supporters organized simultaneous rallies in all eight wards throughout the district Thursday in advance of the vote, but those demonstrations were sparsely attended with about 10 people apiece showing up in two of the locations visited by Fox News cameras. 

DEMOCRATS RENEW DC STATEHOOD PUSH THAT WOULD REMAKE NATIONAL POLITICS

Holmes Norton said D.C. should be no different than the 37 others states that Congress admitted to the union without a constitutional amendment. 

“Congress has both the moral obligation and the constitutional authority to pass H.R. 51,” D.C.’s lone non-voting delegate said in advance of the vote. “This country was founded on the principles of no taxation without representation and consent of the governed. But D.C. residents are taxed without representation, and cannot consent to the laws under which they, as American citizens, must live.”

22 STATE REPUBLICAN AGS SEND LETTER ARGUING DC STATEHOOD IS ‘UNCONSTITUTIONAL’

But Rep. Jody Hice, R-Ga., argued statehood flies in the face of the Constitution, which established the federal district as a non-state seat of government. 

“This is absolutely against what our Constitution and our Founders intended,” Hice said. 

D.C. has a population of more than 700,000 residents – greater than Wyoming and Vermont – but the residents don’t have a voting member in the House and have no representation in the Senate. Nor does the district have control over its own local affairs. However, the District of Columbia pays more in federal taxes than 21 states and more per capita than any state, according to the 2019 IRS data book. 

Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser, testifies at the House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing, on D.C. statehood, Monday, March 22, 2021, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (Caroline Brehman/Pool via CQ Roll Call)

Under the plan, the 51st state would be called “Washington, Douglass Commonwealth,” named for Frederick Douglass. The state would consist of 66 of the 68 square miles of the present-day federal district.

The two square miles around the White House, Capitol, Supreme Court and National Mall would be carved out into a reduced federal district controlled by Congress and named the “Capital.”

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D.C. would have full control over local affairs and full representation in Congress, which would amount to two senators and one representative in the House based on the current population.

Biden‘s White House Tuesday formally backed making Washington, D.C., the 51st state and urged Congress to pass the legislation to give Washingtonians “long overdue full representation.”

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