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D.C. may require ‘Taxation Without Representation’ license plates

By: Michael Neibauer
Examiner Staff Writer
January 7, 2009

Most D.C. residents would have little choice but to accept license plates with the District’s “Taxation without Representation” motto under legislation introduced Tuesday by the D.C. Council.

The measure, offered by Ward 1 Councilman Jim Graham and co-sponsored by seven of his colleagues, would require all plates issued by the Department of Motor Vehicles to bear the city’s rallying cry for congressional voting rights. The only exemptions would be for organizational and vintage plates.

“We will eliminate the option to have the D.C. government Web site instead on the plates,” Graham said during the council’s first legislative meeting of 2009.

All vehicle registrants receive “Taxation Without Representation” plates automatically. The DMV will provide a “www.dc.gov” plate upon request, but there are only 3,567 dc.gov tags active today. Graham said he was inspired to draft the bill after seeing “Metro vehicle after Metro vehicle” with the dc.gov tags.

“Taxation without Representation” should be the standard plate, said Mark Plotkin, WTOP political analyst and die-hard voting rights advocate. It’s not like residents had a choice, he said, between “Celebrate and Discover,” the preceding slogan, and something else.

“This is a statement of fact, a statement of condition, irrefutable,” Plotkin said. “If it said ‘No Taxation Without Representation,’ it would be a point of view. ‘No,’ that’s a statement of opinion.”

He added: “The major thing is, will [President-elect Barack] Obama, in his first executive act, put that on the presidential limousine?”

The first meeting of council session 18 was dominated by legislative introductions. There were bills to encourage more youth mentoring, to broaden lead abatement requirements, to amend residential permit parking rules, and to increase revenue for mental health needs, among others.

Ward 3 Councilwoman Mary Cheh, a constitutional law professor, proposed barring “unwanted targeted picketing” outside a home “with the intent to intimidate, threaten, abuse, annoy, or harass the individual.” The “Residential Tranquility Act,” Cheh has said, was provoked by an animal rights extremist group targeting homes in Northwest Washington.

“We would argue that the bill certainly violates First Amendment values,” said Stephen Block, legislative counsel to the American Civil Liberties Union - National Capital Area. “Picketing is a quintessential form of First Amendment expression.”

Those who argue the legislation restricts First Amendment rights are “demonstrably wrong,” Cheh said, as the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled time and again that reasonable time, place and manner restrictions on protests are allowed.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff.

Read the Instructions?

Jan 7, 2009

Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 Congress shall have the power...(t)o exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular states, and the acceptance of Congress, become the seat of the government of the United States" DC is a federal creation, NOT a state. Article I, Section 2 :The House of Representatives shall be composed of members chosen every second year by the people of the several states Article 1, Section 3:he Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each state Constitutionally, the STATES have the right to representation in the Congress. Unless you can amend the Constitution, this whole debate is moot - why does DC think its any more entitled than any other territory, protectorate, or federal district?

 

DC Resident

Jan 7, 2009

As a 40 years resident of DC,I do not want to be force to have those words on my vehicle tags specifically because the District todate haven't convince me as a voting citizen that statehood will be handle appropiately as indicated by the current involvement in low level personnel matters without due process by the Mayor, Citizen gun rights,the Financial debacle of the CFO, the Juvenile System Director continous endangerment of the community with mis-guided policies, U.S. attorney debacle and many other actions by a dis-functional City Council. Only when I feel real leadership are in charge of the District, then and only then, I will without hesitation utilize a taxation without repersentation tag on my vehicle.

 

Read the Fine Print

Jan 7, 2009

"why does DC think its any more entitled than any other territory, protectorate, or federal district?" Name another U.S. territory, protectorate, or federal district that pays federal taxes. Apples and oranges argument.

 

Someone who can read

Jan 7, 2009

The Constitution of the United States reserves certain rights to states. Folks who live in DC who feel strongly about this issue should move to Maryland (we don't want them down here in Virginia). Nobody is being FORCED to live in the District (except, arguably the President and Vice President) so this should not be an issue. If the District's government insists, they should be reminded that they "rule" (so to speak) not as a sovereign government (as the states are) but at the will of Congress.

 

Brutus

Jan 7, 2009

How about "taxation without consent" which was the greivance in the Declaration of Independence? Oh, wait a second. To put that on our license plates would acknowledge a belief in natural rights which supercede and antecede government, and that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governened and that if a government becomes abusive of such powers we have the right and duty to abolish such a government. It means the citizens of a nation have the right to secede from any government, local or national, that they find oppressive. Clearly such thinking is outmoded and only neanderthals like myself believe in individual liberty. We simply can't have anything like that in this country, and especially this city.

 

Jordan

Feb 23, 2009

This is just out freaking license plate. why put any opinion at all. when i lived in florida, they said "sunshine state". oh, but i hate the sunshine, so take it off and put florida.gov --- great. this is so dumb to waste money on. all that extra ink and time to put a message of social unrest. no one is forcing you to remain in DC. And finally. hey, i live in DC but pay no state income tax, great, let me move to california and pay their tax too!

 


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