Is Kasich Right About DC Statehood Opposition?

Is Kasich Right About DC Statehood Opposition?
Published: 25 Apr, 2016
2 min read

Republican presidential candidate John Kasich is often plain spoken, even about his own party's flaws.

In a meeting with the Washington Post's editorial board, Kasich gave a brutally honest reason for his party's opposition to D.C. statehood:

What it really gets down to, if you want to be honest, is because they know that’s just more votes in the Democratic Party.

Looking at any red/blue county map, you can instantly see what Kasich is talking about. Most of the urban areas in and around Washington D.C. tend to vote solidly Democratic in most elections.

Washington D.C. -- just the federal zone (not the surrounding metropolitan area) -- would become the 49th most populated state -- ahead of Vermont and Wyoming, but still well within the range of only getting allocated 1 House member and the standard 2 senators.

The 'all-powerful' ability to form or deny cloture in the Senate, would give the Democratic Party an instant overnight advantage.

This kind of political jockeying is far from abnormal in our country's history.

Even the Missouri Compromise of 1820 was designed to maintain the status quo -- Missouri admitted as a slave state, Maine admitted as a free state. This balance would remain until the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 upset the balance, and was seen as one of the primary political causes of the Civil War.

In recent history, however, admitting states has been more along economic instead of political lines; D.C. would definitely not be an economic burden to the U.S., having one of the strongest economies of cities in the country.

So, more than likely Kasich is probably right when he suggests that denial of D.C. statehood is purely political in nature.

IVP Donate

But the reality then becomes, why are we allowing political games to be played with the lives of over 670,000 American citizens? Especially when they pay in over $20 billion in federal taxes, the highest per capita federal tax in the nation, and still don't have representation in Congress.

You Might Also Like

New IVP 2026 California Governor Poll: What the Toplines Don’t Tell You
New IVP 2026 California Governor Poll: What the Toplines Don’t Tell You
Using verified California voter file data, IVP surveyed high-propensity voters from February 13 through 20. The poll tested first-choice ballot preferences alongside issue intensity on affordability and the cost of living, immigration enforcement, more choice reform, and more....
23 Feb, 2026
-
10 min read
81% of Americans Say Money Controls Politics – Can a Constitutional Amendment Fix It?
81% of Americans Say Money Controls Politics – Can a Constitutional Amendment Fix It?
Polls consistently show that nearly all Americans across the political spectrum agree that there is too much money in politics – whether from foreign sources, corporations, or so-called “dark money” groups. ...
23 Feb, 2026
-
13 min read
10 Reasons Why the Congressional Stock Trading Ban Will Never Pass
10 Reasons Why the Congressional Stock Trading Ban Will Never Pass
The overlap between committee assignments and stock ownership is not automatically illegal. Because the current legal framework permits this proximity as long as disclosure rules are followed, lawmakers are not operating under a system that forces change....
20 Feb, 2026
-
4 min read