Washington’s Delegate Fails to Defend the District Amid Federal Overreach — Time for New Leadership
As federal forces tighten control over Washington, D.C., its longtime nonvoting House delegate, Eleanor Holmes Norton, has remained largely silent, raising serious questions about her effectiveness and the need for fresh leadership to defend the city’s autonomy and the America First principle of local self-governance.
Washington, D.C., stands at a crossroads. Federal troops patrol its streets; masked federal agents detain residents; and Congress tightens its grip on the city’s autonomy through new legislation that chips away at local authority. Yet, amid this unprecedented intervention into the nation’s capital—America’s seat of freedom—the city’s voice in Congress remains conspicuously absent. Eleanor Holmes Norton, who has served as Washington’s nonvoting delegate for 18 terms since 1991, embodies this silence. Once a formidable advocate with a storied history in civil rights and public service, Norton now appears diminished—her public appearances marked by unsteady delivery and scarce engagement in defending...
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