DB8 Speech & Debate Academy
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H.R. 1189·High School Experienced

A Bill to Admit the District of Columbia as the 51st State

Rep. Becker (D-WA)

Admits the Douglass Commonwealth as a state, shrinking the federal district to federal buildings.

Sec. 1 — Mandate

The territory presently constituting the District of Columbia (excluding designated federal enclaves) is admitted as the State of the Douglass Commonwealth.

Sec. 2 — Federal Enclave

A reduced federal district encompasses the National Mall and core federal buildings.

Sec. 3 — Funding

$140 million for state-establishment costs.

Sec. 4 — Enforcement

Statutory admission; no constitutional amendment required.

Tournament Prep

Mechanical parts, sourced & timed

Use this as your pre-round checklist. Memorize the source citation. Time yourself to the delivery target.

Bill / Number
H.R. 1189 — A Bill to Admit the District of Columbia as the 51st State
Funding source
$140M for state-establishment costs.
Timeline
Effective on enactment.
Realistic mechanically; constitutional challenge near-certain.
Enforcing agency
Statutory admission.
Disputed — Article I §8 cl. 17 grants Congress 'exclusive Legislation' over the seat of government, but admission of states is Article IV §3.
Penalty for non-compliance
N/A.
Source citation
CRS R45712 (2023), 'District of Columbia Statehood' — crsreports.congress.gov.
Delivery time (read aloud)
1:10 (70s)
Strongest counter-argument

DC statehood requires a constitutional amendment; statutory admission violates the 23rd Amendment.

Your pre-emptive answer

The CRS report (2023) summarizes the strongest counter — the shrunken federal enclave preserves Article I authority; the 23rd Amendment can be addressed by repeal (Sec. 4 contemplates this) since it would otherwise grant electors to a tiny federal residence with virtually no residents. Hawaii and Alaska admissions show statutory admission is the historical norm, not the exception.