WASHINGTON ā The Senate voted Wednesday to block new District of Columbia crime laws and overrule the city government as lawmakers in both parties have expressed concern about rising violent crime rates in cities nationwide.
President Joe Biden said last week that he will sign the Republican resolution, which passed the Senate 81-14 after passing the House last month. It marked the first time in more than three decades that Congress has nullified the capital cityās laws through the disapproval process ā and a shift in the long-held Democratic position that the federal government should let D.C. govern itself.
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Biden, who is set to announce a reelection campaign in the coming months, has been under increasing pressure on the issue from Republicans who have made reducing crime a political priority. In D.C., homicides in the city had risen for four years straight before they dropped around 10% in 2022. The 2021 murder count of 227 was the highest since 2003.
āWe are the greatest superpower nation in history,ā Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said on the Senate floor Wednesday morning. "This is our capital city. But local politicians have let its streets become a danger and an embarrassment.ā
Eleanor Holmes Norton, the districtās nonvoting delegate in the House, pushed back on the effort, speaking at a āHands off D.C.ā rally ahead of the vote.
āThere are no exceptions and there is no middle ground on D.C.ās right to self-government," Norton said.
In a statement released after Wednesday night's vote, D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb said, āAny attempt to replace District residentsā will with that of federal politicians elected hundreds of miles away violates the basic freedoms and principles on which this country was founded.
"To overturn our local, democratically enacted laws ā the product of 10+ years of collaboration between law enforcement, judges, and policy experts ā without any independent analysis, review, or alternative proposal, is not only undemocratic, but also careless.ā
The overhaul of D.C.ās criminal code was approved late last year by the city council after years of failed attempts. It would redefine crimes, change criminal justice policies and rework how sentences should be handed down after convictions. It would also do away with mandatory minimum sentences for many crimes and reduce the maximum penalties for burglary, carjacking and robbery.
Mayor Muriel Bowser vetoed the overhaul in January, writing in a letter that she had āvery significant concernsā about some of the billās proposals. She later suggested changes after the council overrode her veto.
Senate Democrats supporting the measure have cited Bowserās veto, arguing that it needs another look.
āWhat weāve heard from the mayor of D.C. is thereās more work to be done,ā said Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow.
Virginia Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner, both Democrats, said they would vote for the resolution āand urge the mayor and council to work together to create a safer city for all, including the many Virginians who commute to DC for work every day.ā
Washington, D.C.ās criminal code was originally written in 1901 and received a handful of piecemeal updates since then. It contains multiple anachronistic details, such as a reference to steamboats and regulations for the care and feeding of livestock being transported through the city.
The changes were set to effect in October 2025. But to become law, it had to survive a 60-day review period during which Congress and the president could override it, thanks to a 1970s-era law called the Home Rule Act. Though Congress has imposed various limits on D.C. through spending bills over the years, the formal disapproval process hasnāt been used since 1991.
As it stands now, criminal justice experts say that the D.C. criminal code has disproportionately affected Black people, similar to many other cities.
Defending the revisions, D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson and other councilmembers maintain that the reduced sentences for offenses such as carjacking would still place the maximum sentences well above the penalties chosen by the vast majority of judges. They argue that the current high sentence maximums have done little to deter rising crime in the District in recent years.
Bidenās surprise decision to support the Republican measure angered many House Democrats, like Norton, who had voted against the measure in the House after the White House signaled opposition.
The White House did not explicitly say then that Biden would veto the measure. But the statement issued ahead of the House vote said the White House opposed the resolution and called it an example āof how the District of Columbia continues to be denied true self-governance and why it deserves statehood."
āWhile we work towards making Washington, D.C., the 51st state of our Union, Congress should respect the District of Columbiaās autonomy to govern its own local affairs,ā the White House statement said.
After announcing in a Senate Democratic caucus luncheon last week that he would instead support the resolution and sign it, Biden tweeted that he supports D.C. statehood. But he added, āI donāt support some of the changes D.C. Council put forward over the mayorās objections ā such as lowering penalties for carjackings.ā
McConnell called Bidenās move a āflip-flop.ā
āThe public pressure was so great that the president now says he wants to sign the same Republican bill that heād previously announced he opposed,ā McConnell said.
While many Democrats supported the bill, some were less than enthusiastic.
āIām going to vote yes,ā Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters Tuesday. āIt was a tough question, but on balance I am voting yes.ā