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District Officials Turn to N.H. House For Vote Bill Support

New Hampshire Sen. John Sununu, a Republican, is under fire for helping defeat D.C.'s voting bill.
New Hampshire Sen. John Sununu, a Republican, is under fire for helping defeat D.C.'s voting bill. (By Adam Berry -- Bloomberg News)
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By Mary Beth Sheridan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, January 5, 2008

D.C. politicians will be watching New Hampshire next week, and not just because of the presidential primary Tuesday.

New Hampshire lawmakers are considering a rebuke of the state's two U.S. senators for opposing the D.C. vote bill in Congress. Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D) and several District Council members plan to testify at a hearing in Concord onWednesday.

The resolution was sponsored by a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, Cindy Rosenwald, at the request of D.C. Council member David A. Catania. He said he hopes it is the beginning of a new offensive to promote D.C. voting rights.

"We've talked ourselves to death about this issue, but we need to take our show on the road and build allies," said Catania (I-At Large).

New Hampshire senators John Sununu and Judd Gregg joined other Republicans in blocking the D.C. bill from getting an up-or-down Senate vote last September. It fell three votes short of the 60 necessary to end a filibuster.

Catania said he was so upset at the defeat that he turned to Rosenwald, whom he met through a state legislators organization. The Nashua Democrat agreed to sponsor the resolution, in part because she had been so impressed by D.C. license plates emblazoned "Taxation Without Representation," she said.

"In New England, you have that Boston Tea Party drilled into you," she said in an interview. "I guess I just was struck by the reality that the citizens of the District really are taxed without representation."

Fenty said he hopes the New Hampshire trip will provide visibility to the city's lack of a voting representative in Congress.

"The only way to get full voting rights is to make people aware of it and agitate and cajol," he said. "I like the idea of taking the lobbying out to other places and capitalizing on the presidential campaign, the focus on New Hampshire."

The resolution does not mandate any action by Sununu and Gregg, and their offices declined to comment yesterday . D.C. vote strategists are trying to get at least three senators to reverse their votes on the filibuster, which would permit the legislation to return to the floor this year. Senate staffers said that probably will be difficult.

Fenty, head of Barack Obama's District campaign, is scheduled to travel to New Hampshire on Tuesday for last-minute campaigning for the Democratic presidential candidate. D.C. Council Chairman Vincent C. Gray (D) and eight other members of the 13-person council are set to join the mayor there Wednesday.

Council members will pay their own way, and Fenty is using leftover funds from his inaugural celebration, his spokesman said.


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