I thank CON for their opening arguments in R1. I will now give comment and rebuttals for their content. I implore CON to do the same, as set out in the debate description. All block quotes are the words of CON.
"The Precedent if DC becomes a State"
DC is a city
DC is declared a city by CON without a source. This can easily be excused as it could easily be a natural assumption, however, it is not a clear cut case. It is important to define a city.
"In the United States, an incorporated city is a legally defined government entity, with powers delegated by the state and county" [17]
As D.C. is outside the boundaries of any state and/or county, it cannot be legally defined, under US law, as a city. The same source that I used to define D.C. itself backs this up by stating "[D.C.] is neither a state nor a city; it is a territory." [1]
With this understanding, this argument can be simplified and rejected by use of a modus tollens ("mode of taking")
P1: If a city becomes a state, it creates a bad precedent.
P2: D.C. is not a city
C1: Therefore, D.C. becoming a state does not create a bad precedent.
If DC were to become a state, the precedent would be set for any major city in the country to become a state.
This is incorrect because of a key distinction. D.C. is not under any state's authority whereas all other cities in the union are. The U.S. constitution makes creating a new state from land already in a state unconstitutional. It specifically states "but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State" [2][20]
Also, there is little reason for any other city to become a state as they already have Congressional representation.
The geographical size of DC is only 68 square miles - significantly smaller than the smallest state in America, Rhode Island, which is 1,214 square miles.
I do not believe geographical size should be used as a measure of what should or should not be a state. I have already established that Washington D.C. surpasses other states in the areas of population and GDP which I propose are much better indicators of what should become a state.
"Problems with Bias"
[The President] could become partial to one specific state - DC. I want my President to be concerned about the country's wellbeing over one state. Turning DC into a state opens the door for tyranny to waltz into America.
CON fails to explain why Washington D.C. would make the President partial to D.C. as they already have (since 1961) electoral votes as bestowed to them under the 23rd Amendment to the Constitution. [18] [19]
I would hope that all people want the President of the United States to be concerned with all states of the Union.
CON has failed to explain why tyranny is in any way a logical sequitur to D.C. statehood.
"The U.S. Constitution"
CON explains the current constitutional position of Washington D.C. under Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution. PRO accepts this explanation as fact.
However, this is completely irrelevant as the "become a state of the United States of America" as is the wording of the motion before us, both CON and PRO agreed that the definition, including the key part "with all necessary amendments to the Constitution" meaning in the event of D.C. statehood, this part of the constitution would be repealed rendering it irrelevant to this debate.
"Alternative Solution"
CON has laid out an imaginative solution to the issue that has been proposed in Congress before such as by Rep. Dan Lungren having proposed returning most parts of the city to Maryland, however it has several fatal flaws. [21] [22]
Primarily, any US citizen still living in the 10 sq. mi. would still be without a vote in Congress which would still be unacceptable.
A practical issue would also follow of do you keep the 23rd amendment giving just 10 sq. mi. 3 electoral votes? If you do, it would give a huge amount of electoral power to a tiny fraction of people, and if you don't, then it takes the basic American democratic right to elect the President. A bill put before Congress once suggested this without the 23rd amendment, but was voted down. [23]
Like I said in my argument, it would give them voting representatives and senators.
I don't think DC should become a state. It's better if D.C. is a strictly neutral place and wasn't part of any one state, including itself. What would being a state do to D.C.?
Indeed. Puerto Rico should also be a state
That's my key point.
I guess I should have specified it was presidental elections
Who cares how they vote. If you put your partisanship on either side away, you will clearly see US CITIZENS without proper representation. That is objectively wrong
In the 42nd and 43rd Congress, they elected Republican Norton Chipman as the non-voting delegate to the House of Representatives.
really?? prove it
Not strictly true about always voting Dem.
y puerto rico
It is very nice!
Thanks for the tips on the format on one of my other debates. Is this first argument any better?
Obama unilaterally starting DACA even after saying a few years earlier that he had no authority to do so is one example. Much of FDR's New Deal (most notably the National Recovery Administration, which ironically was called the NRA) was unconstitutional. I'll stop there, however. If I were to list every example of the R's or D's violating the Constitution, or even just the notable examples, I'd be sitting here for a very long time.
FACT: D.C has voted democrat in every election it's been in EVER, of course its for the democrats,LOLS
Idgaf about partisanship, I care about principle. I hate a ton of Republicans because they don't possess conservative principles. I don't think your whole party doesn't care about the Constitution, but the radical wing definitely does not.
The Constitution never said that black people were property. It said that people had a right to their property. They interpreted that in a bad way in which slaves were considered property. (At least as far as I know.)
Sure there can be amendments, but the goal of my party is to form new amendments in the spirit of the Founding Fathers. It is applying the original point of view on modern issues. That point of view is maximizing personal freedom, while limiting the government.
If I remember correctly, McConnell invoked the Biden rule by shooting down Obama's nomination. (Not appointing new justices near the end of a term. The right should be granted to the next president).
I apologize for my harsh tone before. I think that making DC a state sounds like a decent idea on a surface level. I am a little skeptical of some underlying issues that may arise. For instance, national politicians may get more sway over local politics or the DC state may get more power because nearly every powerful government building is in the same area.
When im wrong, I'm wrong.
The president can do that because he is the commander in chief. He says go, they go. It isn't officially a war, but it could sure seem like it to the deployed nation.
Are there any examples of democratic constiution dodging that you know of?
"I conceed it was not unconstitutional,"
Did you just change your mind in an internet debate? That's rare, and I congratulate you for your honesty.
"You did say you agree republicans ignore the constiution when convenient. What are your examples?"
Supporting Trump's emergency declaration is the first one that comes to mind. There are a lot of things both parties ignore, like the fact that only Congress can declare war. However, Congress regularly lets presidents of both parties get away with sending soldiers to fight foreign countries without congressional approval. Another example would be instituting price controls in the days of "stagflation" in the 70s. (I think that was Nixon, but I could be wrong. Of course, we all know what he thought of the constitution and the law).
I look forward to debating this with you.
You did say you agree republicans ignore the constiution when convenient. What are your examples?
Perhaps you are right that the constitution is vague on this issue. For America's sake i hope this precedent does not hold. I conceed it was not unconstitutional, but it was a low blow that made america weaker in the long term. Shame on them.
"These are people entrusted by the people to run there government. It is their duty to advise and consent the president. They can reject the nomination, but they cannot ignore it."
Asserting it does not make it so. The constitution gives them the power to advise and consent. It does not give them the duty to advise and consent. It specifies that a condition of an SC justice being appointed is the advice and consent of the Senate. It does not specify any conditions for the justice not being appointed. The justice has to be confirmed in order to be appointed, but he does not have to be rejected in order to not be appointed. Read it for yourself. Nowhere does the constitution say that they have to vote on who the president nominates.
"Im not saying they broke the law, I'm saying they are failing to do their job. They swore an oath to uphold the constitution, and yet they are ignoring it"
If they are violating their oath to uphold the constitution - which they did not in this instance but have done in other instances - they are breaking the law. The constitution is the supreme law of the land.
"Also the supreme court was designed by the constitution to have 9 judges."
Then please explain why the people who wrote the constitution appointed only five. No, the constitution does not specify a number of SC justices, nor is it designed for any specific number.
These are people entrusted by the people to run there government. It is their duty to advise and consent the president. They can reject the nomination, but they cannot ignore it.
Im not saying they broke the law, I'm saying they are failing to do their job. They swore an oath to uphold the constitution, and yet they are ignoring it.
Also the supreme court was designed by the constitution to have 9 judges.
To quote the most relevant part of the article
"The president negotiates treaties and the Senate consents or does not consent to them. One chamber of Congress passes bills and the other chamber passes or does not pass them. The president proposes laws and Congress enacts or does not enact them. Congress proposes constitutional amendments and state legislatures ratify or do not ratify them. The Constitution is not read in any of these situations to impose a duty on the second entity to act formally on the proposal. If the second entity fails to approve, for whatever reason and in whatever manner, the measure does not take effect."
"He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur; and he shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States"
From Article 2, Section 2 of the US Constitution.
This is what the Constitution says in regards to the appointment of SC justices. "By and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate." In no way does this mean that they have to consider and vote on his nominees. It means that their advice and consent is required in order for the justice to be appointed. It does not say that they have to give their advice and consent. The constitution gives them the power to advise and consent to nominations; it does not require them to give that. If I give you the power to bake cookies, that does not mean you have the duty to bake cookies. Here is an article that explains it better than I can:
https://constitutioncenter.org/blog/why-the-senate-doesnt-have-to-act-on-merrick-garlands-nomination/
They dont have to accept him, but they do have to consider and vote on whether to accept him. The constitution says the president nominates new judges, and the senate interviews and confirms them. They just ignored it, refusing to do their constiutional duty.
While I agree that republicans do ignore the constitution sometimes, the specific example you chose was not unconstitutional in the slightest. There is nothing in the constitution that says the Supreme Court has to be a specific size. There is nothing in it that says the Senate must accept the president's nomination. There is nothing in it that says justices have to be replaced. While you can complain about the result of McConnell's refusal to confirm Garland, there was nothing remotely unconstitutional about it.
Electoral votes dont give you representation in the legislative body.
You clearly dont understand the history of the constitution. Nor do you understand liberals, conservatives, or the concept of individuals without a hive mind. Your partisanship is starting to control you.
The constitution was a series of compromises, not a perfect document, that restricted voting to not even include all white men, forget everyone else. It registered humans as property. The consitution of today is not the original broken document. The constitution was given ammendment rules for a reason. Not for it to be worshiped blindly, but for it to evolve and grow.
Also republicans ignore the consitution all the time. Remember not confirming obamas court choice cause mitch had a better idea?
I think youve been triggered in another debate. Your much less open and much more aggressive then in our previous debate.
Lol
Oh, come now. Conservatives can't do that. ;)
Then obviously amend the constitution.
Well, they have electoral votes because they have population. That is fine. However, it is unconstitutional for DC to be a state, so there is that. I know you liberals love to trample on that document and all....
Cities dont get representation because they get representation thru their state. Texas state representatives represent dallas residents. I addressed that point when i said washington dc does not belong to a state and therefore has no representatives.
If you wish to give them to a state thats fine. The key, objective, issue is they need representation. Any solution is fine. The partisanship is all you, own it.
I was referring to it being carved out of Virginia and Maryland.
I guess you're dropping my "cities don't get representatives" point?
Washington dc is not part of any state, and no state representatives represent them. You do know that right?
Taxation without representation and has been on their official license plates for decades now.
The two states in which DC partially resides both do get representatives and senators.
I am saying that his reasons are obviously partisan. I can see that yours likely are as well. Cities don't get representatives, sir. No matter how big they are.
So your using partisanship to deny people representation? Thats kinda scummy.
If they voted republican you would go the other way right? Their rights dont matter to you do they?
Oh yeah. So, since it is a den of liberals, it would help the Democrats. I now see why he wants it.
They would get two senators and a representative.
What would this change? They already have electoral votes.
Its democrat city!!