Thursday, December 11, 2014

I Got 71 Problems and the House is One

By Brian Contreras

On Thursday night, the 11th of December, the House of Representatives passed a Congressional spending bill that, if made law, will dictate government spending and appropriations for much of the bureaucracy until late next year. They also crucially extended the deadline for the Senate to vote on this vital legislation by two days, staving off yet another government shutdown by a matter of hours.

This bill, in addition to funding many major federal agencies, supplies money to deal with the ongoing issues of Ebola and ISIS, as well as (in a move that has angered leading Democrats like Nancy Pelosi) reducing regulation on Wall Street bankers and increasing the donation cap for individuals to the RNC and DNC.

However, amid all the tension, one seemingly minor inclusion in the bill is drawing much attention from the nation's capitol - not necessarily by those within Congress, but rather the people who call the city home.

The bill, at least as interpreted by the Republicans who are pushing for it's passage, would stop the District of Columbia from legalizing marijuana; a decision that passed with the vast majority of support in DC's November elections as the widely popular Initiative 71. This has led to a planned march by supporters of legalization in DC and a sit-in in Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's office, as well as claims by legalization advocates that the bill's language could be interpreted in such a way as to still allow the change (since it had already been passed by voters). Whether such a loophole is available or not remains to be seen, but judging by the climate in Congress at the moment, things don't look good for supporters of DC's right to self-determination.

A campaign poster from the movement which, if the Congressional spending bill passes the Senate in it's current form, will likely be invalidated.

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