MEMORANDUM OPINION
This lawsuit presents yet another chapter in the District of Columbia’s longstanding struggle to achieve self-government. The District, its Mayor, its Council and Council members, and eighteen of its residents challenge Congress’ refusal to permit taxation of income earned by nonresidents who work within its borders. Plaintiffs contend that the ban constitutes unconstitutional discrimination against residents of the District, who lack the right to vote in Congress. Arguing that commuters in the District should be required to compensate the jurisdiction in which they are employed for the costs they impose, plaintiffs charge that the District’s inability to tax nonresidents creates financial deficits not counterbalanced by its federal subsidies, forcing it to impose disproportionately high tax burdens upon its own residents. Amici for plaintiffs argue that the District is the only jurisdiction in the United States denied the benefit of taxing income earned within its borders, and that even the federal government profits from the income earned by foreigners within the nation’s borders. 1
Plaintiffs’ grievances are serious, and their goal is a laudable one. The unfairness of the District’s situation is obvious and regrettable. Since the establishment of the District, courts have, however, understood that its unique constitutional position results in unfairness. As early as 1805, then Chief Justice Marshall recognized the inequities compelled by the Constitution as he concluded that the Supreme Court could not grant the District the same benefits enjoyed by the states.
See Hepburn & Dundas v. Ellzey,
This Court is likewise mindful of the unfairness of the situation plaintiffs seek to change. But longstanding judicial precedent compels the Court to conclude that plaintiffs do not enjoy the right they seek to obtain. As has been the case for over
BACKGROUND
The District of Columbia is “an exceptional community ... established under the Constitution as the seat of the National Government.”
District of Columbia v. Murphy,
Until recently, Congress exercised its exclusive control over the District through direct legislation and the appointment of local governors, with only minimal input from residents.
See Marijuana Policy Project v. United States,
Between 1948 and 1966, the Senate passed six different bills granting the District some form of home rule, but each time a similar bill died in the House Committee for the District of Columbia. The commissioner system was replaced in 1967 by a presidentially-appointed mayor and council form of government,
see Adams,
The Home Rule Act delegates to the District of Columbia Council “certain legislative powers,” “[sjubject to the retention of Congress of the ultimate legislative authority over the nation’s capital.” D.C.Code Ann. § 1-201.02. The Act protects Congress’ exclusive legislative authority over the District by providing that Council enactments become law only if Congress declines to pass a
joint
resolution of disapproval within thirty days (or sixty days in the case of criminal laws) and by reserving the power to repeal Council
The Act also specifically limits the Council’s lawmaking powers, enumerating matters that are not “rightful subjects of [Council] legislation.” Id. § 1-203.02. The District may not, for example, impose any tax on federal property; it may not regulate federal or local courts, or the Commission on Mental Health; and it may not permit the construction of buildings taller than certain height restrictions. See id. § l-206.02(a)(l)-(a)(8). Plaintiffs’ challenge in this case addresses the Act’s commuter tax prohibition (the “Prohibition”), which is among these enumerated limitations: “The Council shall have no authority to ... [ijmpose any tax on the whole or any portion of the personal income, either directly or at the source thereof, of any individual not a resident of the District ....” Id. § l-206.02(a)(5).
Congress passed the Home Rule Act as a compromise, granting “the people of the District of Columbia an opportunity in exercising their rights once more and yet with adequate safeguards for the Federal interest component.” Home Rule for the District of Columbia, 1973-1974: Background and Legislative History of H.R. 9056, H.R. 9682, and Related Bills Culminating in the District of Columbia Self-Government and Governmental- Reorganization Act, at 2106 (1974) (statement of Rep. Diggs, reprinted from the Cong. Rec., Oct. 9, 1973). The Chairman of the Committee on the District of Columbia viewed the legislation as “a reasonable and rational accommodation between the interests of all Americans in their Nation’s Capital and the basic principle that government should be responsible to the people.” Id. at 3052 (statement of Rep. Diggs, reprinted from the Cong. Rec., Dec. 17,1973).
The Act provided for an annual federal payment to be allotted to the District upon the Mayor’s request. To formulate the fund petition, the Mayor was to “prepar[e] an annual-budget for the government of the district, ... identifying] elements of cost and benefits to the district which result from the unusual role of the district as the Nation’s Capital,” considering, among other things, the “potential revenues that would be realized if exemptions from district taxes were eliminated,” and the “relative tax burden on District residents compared to that of residents in other jurisdictions in the ... metropolitan area and in other cities of comparable size.” D.C.Code Ann. §§ l-205.01(a), (b)(3), (b)(9) (repealed 1997). Thereafter, Congress authorized a maximum annual amount for the appropriation. The federal payment was not to exceed $230 million for the fiscal year, ending June 30, 1975, $254 million for 1976, $280 million for 1977, and $300 million for 1978. Id. §§ 1-205.02 (repealed 1997). By the mid-1990s, the federal payment had increased to $660 million per year.
By 1997, however, lawmakers concluded that the “financial constraints uniquely applicable to the District” required greater federal budgetary and management responsibility “for some very costly District operations which are either state-like functions which virtually no other city in the nation performs, or which are burdens which the federal government itself created and unfairly transferred to the District government as part of the home rule deal.”
Hearing before the Senate and House District of Columbia Subcommittees on the President’s National Capital Revitalization and Self-Government Improvement Plan,
105th Cong. (1997) (statement of Charlene Drew Jarvis, District of Columbia Councilmember). Thus, through the National Capital Revitalization and Self-Government Improvement Act of 1997, Pub.L. 105-33, 111 Stat. 712 (§§ 11000-
Through the Revitalization Act, Congress attempted to financially compensate the District for costs associated with “the extraordinary Federal presence,” including “crowd control, restrictions on revenue raising capacity because of tax exempt property, height restrictions, and restrictions on non-residence incоme taxes.” Hearing before the House District of Columbia Subcommittee on the White House Plan to Revitalize D.C., 105th Cong. (1997) (statement of Andrew Brimmer, Chairman, District of Columbia Financial Responsibility and Assistance Authority) (emphasis added). The “forgone nonresident income taxes” were “estimated to be $1.2 billion annually,” an amount only expected to increase “as more District residents migrate to neighboring jurisdictions' — but continue to work in the city.” Id. Congress was, therefore, directed to take into account the restrictions upon the overall size of the District’s economy and the limitations upon its ability to tax income when determining “such amount as may be necessary” for the District’s appropriation. See Revitalization Act, Pub.L. 105-33, 111 Stat. at 778 (§ 11601(c)(1), (c)(2)(B)). Thus, despite concerns surrounding the discontinuation of the District’s federal payment, the Revitalization Act was touted as “ ‘the most promising and certainly the most innovative approach yet to emerge for relieving the District government of costs it can no longer shoulder.’ ” David A. Vise, Clinton Proposes U.S. Rim Many D.C. Services, Washington Post, Jan. 14, 1997, at A1 (quoting Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton).
While income tax from commuters would undeniably increase the District’s revenues, Congress has chosen to address the District’s financial situation through other means, and has rejected every proposed commuter tax since 1975. Bills introduced shortly after the passage of the Home Rule Act sponsored by Representative McKinney (Amendment to the District of Columbia Income and Franchise Tax Act of 1947, H.R. 11579, 94th Cong. (1976)) and Representative Dellums (Amendment to the District of Columbia Self-Government and Governmental' Réorganization Act, H.R. 11303, 95th Cong. (1978)) died in committee. More recent proposals introduced by District Delegates Walter Faun-troy (Amendment to the District of Columbia Self-Government and Governmental Reorganization Act, H.R. 2641, 99th Cong. (1985)) and Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia Fair Federal Compensation Act of 2002, H.R. 3923, 107th Cong. (2002)) have suffered similar fates. Former District Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly launched a highly-publicized campaign in 1992 promoting a commuter tax, but gave up her efforts in response to political pressure. See Kent Jenkins, Jr., Kelly Drops Commuter Tax Effort, Washington Post, Dec. 6,1992, at Al.
Plaintiffs now challenge Congress’ refusal to permit passage of a commuter tax. While plaintiffs cite to the Equal Protec
Defendants and the intervenors (the State of Maryland and the Commonwealth of Virginia) have moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims. 4 As an initial matter, they challenge the Court’s subject matter jurisdiction arguing that plaintiffs lack standing to challenge the Prohibition and that the issue is nonjusticiable because it presents a political question. As to the merits, defendants and the intervenors seek dismissal on the grounds that since Congress’ prohibition on a commuter tax is constitutionally permissible under its plenary power over the District, there is no legal basis for invalidating Congress’ action. Having heard oral argument on the motions to dismiss on February 17, 2004, the Court will now turn to defendants’ jurisdictional arguments, as well as their arguments regarding plaintiffs’ constitutional claims.
JURISDICTION
I. STANDING
Plaintiffs have standing if they have suffered an “injury in fact,” are able to establish a causal connection between the injury and the offensive conduct, and demonstrate that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The complaint alleges that approximately 500,000 residents commute into the capital each workday, imposing significant uncompensated costs on the District. As a result of the District’s inability to tax these commuters, the individual plaintiffs “bear substantially higher than normal tax burdens,” while the District “perennially suffers revenue deficiencies,” as well as “an inability to fund critical infrastructure improvements.”
5
(Compl.lffl 50-52.) These injuries are not “conjectural or hypotheti-cal1,” they are specifically alleged, and they are suffered only by the District and its residents.
See Lujan,
The complaint also contains sufficient allegations to establish a causal connection between the injury and the District’s inability to tax commuters, claiming that the inability to tax commuters “is the substantial cause of the District’s structural deficit” that forces it to overtax its residents and to reduce necessary public services. (ComplJ 38.) But for the commuter tax ban, plaintiffs contend, the Council could “tax non-resident income earned within its borders [providing] hundreds of millions of dollars in needed revenue for the District [which would] ease the burden on overtaxed District residents [and] provide more and better services to residents and nonresidents.” (Id. ¶ 53.) 7
Finally, defendants challenge the re-dressibility of plaintiffs’ injury, pointing to the fact that, in the event that the Court were to strike down the Prohibition, relief would be obtained only if the Council were to enact a commuter tax and Congress were to abstain from exercising its veto power over such legislation, which, as defendants argue, would be highly unlikely given its consistently hostile response to such legislation.
8
The complaint disposes
II. POLITICAL QUESTION
The political question doctrine arises from two constitutional principles: the separation of powers among the three coordinate branches of government and the inherent limits on judicial capabilities.
United States ex rel. Joseph v. Cannon,
The issue here is whether the Court can review plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge to the Prohibition by applying manageable standards without usurping Congress’ authority over the District.
See Baker,
That Congress’ power is “plenary” is, as even defendants admit
(see id.
at 14 n. 5), insufficient to insulate a law from judicial review.
See, e.g., INS v. Chadha,
Just as this Court may strike down as unconstitutional legislation enacted by Congress for the entire country, the Court is fully empowered to review legislation for the District of Columbia for constitutional infirmities .... Congress’ plenary power to legislate for the District of Columbia in no way strips this Article III Court of its authority, and its duty, to consider claims of constitutional violations.
Marijuana Policy Project v. Dist. of Columbia Bd. of Elections and Ethics,
As in
Marijuana Policy Project,
plaintiffs present a justiciable issue. That case involved a First Amendment challenge to Congress’ refusal to allow the District to enact any law reducing marijuana penalties.
See
Moreover, “[j]udicial standards under the Equal Protection Clause are well developed and familiar.”
Baker,
CONSTITUTIONAL CLAIMS
I. PLAINTIFF’S LEGAL THEORY
Plaintiffs attack the Prohibition by arguing that it discriminates in favor of Congress’ own constituents (particularly the residents of Maryland and Virginia) against unrepresented citizens (the resi
Before addressing the flaws in plaintiffs’ arguments, it is necessary to explicate plaintiffs’ legal theory and to discuss the authorities upon which they rely. Plain-, tiffs, citing a line of Supreme Court tax cases, contend that “in a representative government, the representatives are going to havе an inherent bias in favor of their constituents” (Tr. at 70), and that “when a legislature discriminates against the unrepresented in favor of the represented” in enacting tax laws, such legislation is “simply illegitimate.” (Id. at 31 (“[I]n our view, if you read the cases together, it appears to us that the Court is effectively laying down that principle. It is forbidden, whether we’re invoking the Privileges and Immunities Clause or the Equal Protection Clause, the Court uses the same analysis.”).) Thus, they claim that, at least in the area of taxation, a citizen who has “no voting representation in the halls of the legislature that did the discriminating” is entitled to have the Court “take a harder look” at the legislature’s action (Tr. at 36), and if this standard is applied here, the commuter ban will not survive because it deprives District residents of the right to equal treatment. 10
In making this argument, plaintiffs rely on several Supreme Court cases that provide that if a state chooses to tax its residents’ income, it may also tax earnings of nonresidents employed within its borders as long as the nonresident tax is “of like character, and not more onerous in its effect” than the tax imposed on residents.
Shaffer v. Carter,
In particular, the cornerstone of plaintiffs’ theory is Justice Brennan’s concurrence (joined by Justice Harlan) in
Allied Stores of Ohio, Inc. v. Bowers,
could, in fact, be found in the concept that is proper that those who are bound to a State by the tie of residence and accordingly more permanently receive its benefits are proper persоns to bear the primary share of its costs. Accordingly, in this context, it is proper to say that any relief forthcoming must be obtained from the State Legislature.
Id.
at 533,
This concurrence is cited by the Supreme Court in
Austin v. New Hampshire,
The Privileges and Immunities Clause, by making noncitizenship or nonresi-dence an improper basis for locating a special burden, implicates not only the individual’s right to nondiscriminatory treatment but also, perhaps more so, the structural balance essential to the concept of federalism. Since nonresidents are not represented in the taxing State’s legislative halls, cf. Allied Stores of Ohio, Inc. v. Bowers,358 U.S. 522 , 532-533,79 S.Ct. 437 ,3 L.Ed.2d 480 (1959) (Brennan, J., concurring), judicial acquiescence in taxation schemes that burden them particularly would remit them to such redress as they could secure through their own State; but to prevent (retaliation) was one of the chief ends sought to be accomplished by the adoption of the Constitution.
Id.
at 662,
From these two cases, plaintiffs extrapolate a legal axiom:
Austin’s
“rigorous
The axiom that plaintiffs advance, however, simply cannot be derived from the case law they present. First, they misread the concurring opinion in
Allied Stores.
Although Justices Harlan and Brennan closed by commenting that “any relief forthcoming must be obtained from the State Legislature,”
Austin
affirmed the conclusion that tax laws that unfairly burden nonresidents must be struck down to protеct “the structural balance essential to the concept of federalism.”
Austin,
Since nonresidents are not represented in the taxing State’s legislative halls, judicial acquiescence in taxation schemes that burden them particularly would remit them to such redress as they could secure through their own State; but to prevent (retaliation) was one of the chief ends sought to be accomplished by the adoption of the Constitution.
Id. (quotation and citation omitted). Thus, in Austin, the Court acted to preserve harmony among the states in order to maintain “our constitutional federalism,” not to protect citizens unrepresented by the taxing legislature. Id.
Similarly, in
Metropolitan Life,
the Court struck down tax laws favoring residents in an effort to limit states’ power exerted against “the residents of other state members of our federation.”
The tax cases upon which plaintiffs rely, therefore, cannot be read to establish a rule that a tax law based on lack of representation is discriminatory and therefore illegitimate. Unlike the cases cited by plaintiffs, the commuter tax ban does not implicate federalism concerns or involve the need to restrain the exercise of statе power. Thus, the cases they cite are simply inapposite.
More importantly, even if such a legal theory could be deciphered from those cases, settled principles regarding the District render it inapplicable, for it has been firmly established (understandably to the chagrin of District residents) that the District does not enjoy a traditional form of representative government. Every court to consider the question has concluded that, by virtue of the Constitution, residents of the District do not have the right to vote for members of Congress.
See Adams,
The notion that District residents are represented by the whole of Congress also defeats plaintiffs’ attempt to analogize the Prohibition to unconstitutionally discriminatory state tax laws. District residents are not unrepresented citizens of the taxing legislature as plaintiffs claim, instead, they have “adopted the whole body of Congress for [their] legitimate government.”
Loughborough,
Moreover, if anything, plaintiffs’ reference to
Loughborough (see supra
note 11) undercuts their position. As clearly established, although District residents have no right to congressional representation, the federal government may tax them.
Loughborough,
18 U.S. (5 Wheat) at 325,
Indeed, the fact that Congress functions as the District’s local legislature highlights the 'illogic in plaintiffs’ argument.
See Palmore,
That simply cannot be so. If Congress’ powers over the District are indeed commensurate to á local legislature, Congress has the same prerogative to elect not to impose a commuter tax in the District that state and local legislatures have in their own jurisdictions. In fact, because Congress acts both as local and federal legislature for the District, its legislative authority with respect to the District is much broader than that of a state. Congress has “sweeping and inclusive” powers over the District,
Neild,
In short, Supreme Court jurisprudence does
not
support the principle that tax legislation is subject to constitutional attack if it disfavors those without representation. But even if such a principle could
II. EQUAL PROTECTION
Plaintiffs’ equal protection analysis suffers from several fundamental flaws. First, plaintiffs cannot invoke equal protection principles, since District residents who work here are not similarly situated to out-of-state residents employed here. And even if they were, the Prohibition could not be invalidated under the heightened scrutiny test, but would easily pass muster under a rational basis analysis.
The Court recognizes that the constitutional safeguard of equal protection applies to protect District residents, as all citizens of the nation, from discrimination.
See Shapiro v. Thompson,
Plaintiffs insist that by enacting the Prohibition, “Congress has passed [a] law that makes the District different .... [T]hey have discriminated between residents and nonresidents, even though they may be sitting side-by-side at the same job, earning the same money here in the District.” (Tr. at 7; see also Tr. at 16-17.) Because it permits a tax to be imposed upon rеsidents, but has elected not to permit a tax of nonresidents, Congress is allegedly “discriminating between two groups of people as to whom it has the power to tax as a matter of its local powers.” (Tr. at 14.)
Plaintiffs’ analogy is faulty, for the residents of the District are treated under the Constitution as a distinct class that is not comparable to any other group of citizens. As consistently held by the Supreme Court, the District is constitutionally distinct from the states,
see, e.g., Palmore,
An
en banc
decision by the Court of Appeals for this Circuit has stated as much.
See Cohen,
Thus,
Cohen
establishes that “[i]ndividuals within and without the District of Columbia are not similarly situated with respect to congressional legislation enacted in Congress’ role as local sovereign.”
Cohen,
In an attempt to salvage their equal protection claim, plaintiffs urge the Court to view this case as one “in which Congress has exercised its national power” in conjunction with its local legislative power, arguing that when it passed the Prohibition, Congress was “acting in both capacities.” (Tr. at 10, 28.) They contend that if Congrеss had been acting purely as a local legislature, “there is absolutely no chance in the world [it] would have banned a tax on nonresident income,” rather, it “would have done what every state in the Union does, which is tax all income earned” within its borders.
(Id.
at 11.) Plaintiffs claim that the imposition of taxes upon all income earned in a jurisdiction is a “univer
The Prohibition, however, was clearly enacted under the District Clause as part of a comprehensive package for the District. When Congress enacts laws applicable to the District under its plenary District Clause powers, it usually does so as the District’s local legislature.
See Brown v. United States,
It cannot be the case, furthermore, that Congress “made the rule uniform,” not only because Congress has not acted with respect to any jurisdiction beyond the District, but also because the rule is not uni
Moreover, even if every state chose to tax all income earned within its borders, the practice would not become a “rule” giving the District the right, or Congress the obligation, to do so. Instead, it would amount to a policy consensus among the states. Congress has the power to make different policy choices and depart from the practice of the states when enacting laws specific to • the District, for “[tjhere has never been any rule of law that Congress must treat peoрle in the District of Columbia exactly the same as people are treated in the various states.”
Cohen,
Simply put, under the Constitution and the Home Rule Act, the District and its residents are the subjects of Congress’ unique powers, exercised to address the unique circumstances of our nation’s capital. Neither state practices nor the rest of the nation’s citizens constitute a proper reference class for purposes of challenging the Prohibition. Moreover, even assuming arguendo that plaintiffs are entitled to invoke the protections of Equal Protection Clause to challenge the Prohibition, they are not entitled to the application of a heightened level of scrutiny, and thus, the law must be upheld under the less exacting rational basis test.
A. Standard of Review
1. Heightened Scrutiny
“Most laws will survive equal protection challenge if they bear a rational
Plaintiffs base their argument that the Prohibition “must be subjected to heightened scrutiny” upon the same tax cases they invoke to аllege the illegitimacy of a discriminatory tax based on lack of representation.
(See
Opp. at 18.) They admit, however, that heightened scrutiny is not referenced in any of those decisions applying an equal protection analysis. (Tr. at 30-31.) Instead, the Court conducted a rational basis inquiry with respect to these tax cases, concluding that the “promotion of domestic business by discriminating against nonresident competitors is not a legitimate state purpose.”
Metro. Life,
Nor have plaintiffs established the infringement of a fundamental interest sufficient to warrant a heightened level of scrutiny. As discussed above, they have failed to establish a per se rule of illegitimacy with respect to a discriminatory tax based on a lack of representation. Plaintiffs cannot argue that whenever “a legislature discriminates — in a matter of taxation — in favor of its own constituents and against people who are not represented, the Courts will scrutinizе this discrimination closely.” (Opp. at 5.) Furthermore, as the Court has established, the imposition of taxes upon all income earned in a jurisdiction is not a “universal principle of taxation” that can be used to argue for the existence of a fundamental right. Thus, plaintiffs have failed to present any “fundamental interest” that Congress has breached through its decision to deprive the District of the right to tax commuters.
Plaintiffs’ argument that District residents constitute a suspect class is likewise unavailing. “Suspect class” status is reserved for classifications that “are more likely than others to reflect deep-seated prejudice rather than legislative rationality in pursuit of some legitimate objective.”
Plyler v. Doe,
Despite the holdings in
Adams
and
Cohen,
plaintiffs insist that there is a “fundamental difference” between this case and others, because when enacting the Prohibition, “there was a direct conflict of interest between the constituents [of Congress] who were represented and the citizens in the District who are not represented.” (Tr. at 32.) This argument simply amounts to the contention that District residents’ lack of congressional representation requires the Court to consider their classification suspect. Indeed, plaintiffs admit that if the District had voting representation in Congress, and yet Congress still declined to pass a commuter tax for the District, they would have a “harder case.” (Tr. at 33.) Unfortunately for plaintiffs, the
en banc
Court in
Cohen
flatly rejected the argument that District residents warrant classification as a suspect class because of their inability to vote for a congressional representative: “[E]ven if one accepts the thesis that the class in question is residents of the District of Columbia, the mere lack of the ballot does not establish political powerlessness, or, if it does, political powerlessness alone is not enough for ‘suspect class’ status.”
Cohen,
The Court of Appeals recently affirmed Cohen’s holding in
Calloway,
where it applied rational basis review to Congress’ discriminatory treatment of District residents with respect to an attorneys’ fees provision of the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
2. Rational Basis
Pursuant to this test, the Court must decide whether “there is a rational relationship between the disparity of treatment and some legitimate governmental purpose.”
Heller v. Doe,
Defendants have offered several viable reasons for Congress’ incorporation of the Prohibition into the Home Rule Act. The Act itself was crafted by Congress to strike a careful compromise between its unique constitutional responsibility for the nation’s capital and the District’s desire for self-government. It limited the District’s ability to fully maximize its earning potential in many ways, one of which is its incapacity to tax commuters, but offset those provisions with yearly federal payments to the District. It is rational to conclude that the Prohibition is an attempt to ensure that all of the nation’s taxpayers make a fair financial contribution to the nation’s capital through these federal appropriations, rather than disproportionately burdening the states that surround the District for its support. See Statement by the President Upon Signing thе Bill into Law, 9 Weekly Comp. Pres. Doc. 1483 (Dec. 24, 1973) (“As the principal employer in Washington, D.C., the Federal Government recognizes its responsibility to pay its fair share of the operations of the District government.”).
Defendants and the intervenors also cite the promotion of business in the District as a rational basis for the Prohibition. “Economic development [is a reason] Congress might well have had in mind when it decided not to let the [District] impose a tax on nonresidents .... [I]f Virginians have to pay high taxes to work on this side of the river, they might as well stay on the other side and pocket the difference.” (Tr. at 66-67.) This purpose is entirely legitimate and has consistently been found to provide a rational basis. Indeed, “it has repeatedly been held and appears to be entirely settled that a statute which encourages the location within the State of needed and useful industries by exempting them ... from its taxes is not arbitrary and does not violate the Equal Protection Clause.”
Allied Stores,
A rational basis can also be found “in the сoncept that it is proper that those who are bound to a State by the tie of residence and accordingly more permanently receive its benefits are proper persons to bear the primary share of its costs.”
Allied Stores,
Plaintiffs allege that Congress chose to forbid the District from taxing nonresident income in an effort to benefit their own constituents at the expense of the District, attempting to conjure suspicions of animus — and negate any perceived rational basis — by citing various comments in opposition to a commuter tax by members of Congress. (See,
e.g.,
Opp. at 43 (quoting
Commuter Tax: Hearings and Markup on H.R. 11303 & 10116 Before the Sub-comm. on Fiscal Affairs and the House Comm, on the District of Columbia,
95th Cong. 190 (1978) (statement of Rep. Harris) (“[I]t is impossible to be altruistic when it comes to the commuter tax question.”)).) The Court, however, cannot invalidate legislation based on statements by individual legislators during debate “which could be reenaсted in its exact form if the same or another legislator made a ‘wiser’ speech about it.”
United States v. O’Brien,
Moreover, despite the arguments in the
amicus
brief filed on behalf of plaintiffs’ position, “it has long been settled that a classification,
though discriminatory,
is not arbitrary nor violative of the Equal Protection Clause ... if any state of facts reasonably can be conceived that would sustain it.”
Allied Stores,
at 528,
III. THE UNIFORMITY CLAUSE
Plaintiffs fare no better under the Uniformity Clause, which provides that “Duties, Imposts and Excises [imposed by Congress] shall be uniform throughout the United States.” U.S. Const., Art I, § 8, cl. 1. Although the Prohibition amounts to neither a direct nor indirect tax
imposed
by Congress, plaintiffs’ Uniformity Clause claim rests on the proposition that a violation can result from legislation exempting a particular geographic region from taxation or forbidding a specific region from imposing a tax.
(See
Opp. at 7, 48 (“[Congress has] diseriminat[ed] against a single geographic region — the District — and
To the extent that such an analysis is appropriate, the principles of uniformity advanced in
Loughborough
and ensured by the Uniformity Clause simply do not apply to this case. That Clause limits Congress’ powers of commerce and taxation,
see Pta-synski,
It has long been established that Congress may constitutionally impose excises in the territories which it governs directly, without making such excises generally applicable to the country at large. Many District of Columbia taxes are excise's and have been upheld. The uniformity requirement was not mentioned in any of these District of Columbia. cases, but the omission seems to indicate that it was deemed to be a settled question. The courts sustained the taxes without referring to this constitutional restriction.
Mercury Press, Inc. v. Dist. of Columbia,
As with their attempts to apply equal protection principles, plaintiffs’ uniformity argument is premised on the faulty assumption that the Prohibition represents legislation of a national character.
(See
Tr. at 28.) As discussed above,
Loughbor-ough
only restricts Congress to uniformity in the application of its
federal
taxing power over the District,
see 18
U.S. (5 Wheat) at 317,
Plaintiffs, nonetheless, cite
Binns v. United States,
Instead, as previously discussed, whether a provision of the Home Rule Act represents national or local legislation is determined, not by its purpose or effect, but rather, by the power invoked.
See Key,
And even if the Uniformity Clause were applicable, Congress enacted the Home Rule Act and its individual provisions regarding taxation in order to address a geographically-isolated situation, which is entirely permissible despite the overarching goal of uniformity.
See Ptasynski,
IV. THE PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES CLAUSE
Plaintiffs collapse their privileges and immunities claim with their equal protection claim because, as noted аbove, almost half of the tax cases they rely on to construct their theory were decided under the Privileges and Immunities Clause. These cases require a “substantial reason for the difference in treatment” where nonresidents are subject to a more burdensome tax than residents of the taxing state, because of the protections afforded all state citizens by the Privileges and Immunities Clause in Article IV of the Constitution.
See Lunding,
It is likewise unclear whether plaintiffs can import the privileges and immunities principles of the Fourteenth Amendment to the District. Although equal protection principles are incorporated into the Fifth
But even if plaintiffs can apply the privileges and immunities of citizenship to Congress’ enactment of the Prohibition, there is no right of national citizenship abridged by this legislation. “Privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States are only such as arise out of the nature and essential character of the National Government, or are specifically granted or secured to all citizens or persons by the Constitution of the United States.”
Jones v. Helms,
CONCLUSION
While the Court is sympathetic to plaintiffs’ arguments and fully appreciates the manifest inequity created by the District’s inability to tax commuters, the Court lacks the power to grant the remedy that plaintiffs seek. The Constitution and binding Supreme Court and Circuit precedent establish Congress’ plenary power over the District and its residents and their unique status within our constitutional framework. Despite its apparent unfairness, the legislative scheme at issue here is not unconstitutional, and therefore, the motions to dismiss must be granted.
ORDER
For the reasons set forth in the accompanying Memorandum Opinion, it is here: by
ORDERED that the- Motions to Dismiss the Complaint filed by the Federal Defendants [7-1], the Commonwealth of Virginia [10-1], and the State of Maryland [8-1] are GRANTED; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ Complaint is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
THIS IS A FINAL APPEALABLE ORDER.
Notes
. Concerned with the fiscal health of the District, the District of Columbia Affairs Section of the District of Columbia Bar and most of the Bar's former presidents have joined plaintiffs as amici curiae.
. The historical forces that led to the establishment of exclusive federal сontrol over the nation’s capital are explained in
Adams,
. The Revitalization Act also provides for U.S. Treasury loans, as well as other grants and tax incentives, in order to “relieve the district government of major financial and managerial responsibilities ... [and] help the city resolve its cash shortfall that stems from its accumulated deficit.” Hearing before the House District of Columbia Subcommittee on President Clinton’s Plan to Help Restore the Economic Health of the City, 105th Cong. (1997) (statement of Franklin Raines, Director, Office of Management and Budget).
. Plaintiffs have named the United States, the Department of Justice, and Attorney General John Ashcroft as defendants. The Commonwealth of Virginia and the State of Maryland joined the defendants as intervenors and have moved to dismiss plaintiffs' complaint as well. An amicus brief in support of Virginia's motion was filed by the Virginia jurisdictions of Fairfax County, Loudoun County, Prince William County, the City of Alexandria, the City of Falls Church, the City of Manassas, and the City of Manassas Park.
. Plaintiffs describe the District’s financial situation by reference to a United States General Accounting Office report, issued on June 5, 2003, which concluded that there is a "substantial structural imbalance in the District," meaning that "even if the District’s services were managed efficiently, the District would have to impose above-average tax burdens just to provide an average level of services,” despite the District's receipt of federal funds. (Opp. at 10; Compl. ¶¶ 38-40.) The District's inability to tax nonresidents' income, plaintiffs maintain, deprives it of up to $1.4 billion in tax revenues each year, forcing it to tax its residents at a higher rate while providing them fewer services. If the District were to tax its residents at average rates, they allege, its revenues would fall short by between $470 million and $1.1 billion each year. At this stage, the Court must accept plaintiffs' factual allegations as true for purposes of deciding defendants’ motions to dismiss.
.Defendants argue that the District and its Council lack standing because they "have neither a 'right' nor a 'legally-protected interest’ in making any legislative determination for the District.” (Mot. at 17.) This position misconstrues the standing requirement. The Court must presume for purposes of standing analysis that plaintiffs have the right they claim.
See Adams,
90 F.Supp.2d at
41
(presuming that District residents are entitled to representation in the House and concluding that denial of such a voice "plainly constitutes an 'injury in fact' ");
see also Warth v. Seldin,
. Defendants argue that only the United States is a proper defendant, and that the United States Department of Justice and the Attorney General should be dismissed. The contested defendants, however, are properly named when plaintiffs challenge a statute as unconstitutional.
See, e.g., Am. Library Ass’n v. Barr,
. Efforts to bring up the commuter tax issue have been met with vocal opposition. For example, when Senator Harkin reopened the idea in 1988, he received much criticism. Representative Hoyer responded that "[t]he chance of that happening ... is zero.” Tom Sherwood,
Commuter Tax Controversy Rekindled in D.C. Budget Meeting,
Washington Post, May 26, 1988, at B11. Discussing a proposed legislative amendment that would create a commuter tax, Representative Harris of Virginia stated that it was impossible for him "to be altruistic when it comes to the commuter tax question.”
Commuter Tax: Hearings and Markup on H.R. 11303 & 10116 Before the House Subcommittee on the District of Columbia,
95th Congress (1978). The issue was the source of such contention in debates surrounding potential District statehood in 1988 that District Delegate Fauntroy was forced to assure wavering supporters of statehood that,
. In
Baker,
the Supreme Court articulated six factors which guide the identification of a non-justiciable political question: a "textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department,” a "lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it,” the "impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion,” the "impossibility of a Court’s undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of respect due coordinate branches of government,” an "unusual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already made,” or the "potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question.”
. As argued by plaintiffs’ counsel:
Congress has an inherent bias in favor of its constituents .... And that’s why Chief Justice Marshall said in Loughborough that the unrepresented District residents were protected by a right of equal treatment. It's why the Supreme Court said in Austin v. New Hampshire that Maine residents are protected by a right of equal treatment. It's why in case after case that we've cited, the Court said the right of the nonresident is the right to equal treatment.
(Tr. at 70.)
. Plaintiffs also rely on dicta from Loughbor-ough, where Chief Justice Marshall observed:
If it be said, that the principle of uniformity, established in the constitution, secures the district from oppression in the imposition of indirect taxes, it is not less true, that the principle of apportionment, also established in the constitution, secures the district from any oppressive exercise of the power to lay and collect direct taxes.
. Justice Brennan made clear that, in the area of state taxation, the Equal Protection Clause is "an instrument of federalism” and that it operates to "maintain this principle'of federalism” in the same manner as the Commerce and Due Process Clauses operate to regulate commerce among the states.
Id.
at 532,
. The principles embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause are applied to acts of Congress in the District through the Due Process Clause of thе Fifth Amendment.
See Bolling,
. Although the majority disagreed with Justice Mikva's concurrence to some extent, this proposition stands. Justice Mikva’s analysis included the notion that Congress' actions visa-vis the District "ought to be immune from equal protection attack” only "when a state legislature could ... impose the same rule in its state that Congress has imposed in the District.” Id. at 142. The majority found this assumption unsubstantiated and too limiting, responding that "the Constitution does not contain the principle that Congress cannot exercise its powers as a local sovereign where it has preempted the states from exercising similar local powers.” Id. at 132-n. 10.
. Thai is not to say that every enactment will be considered "local” under all circumstances. For example, in
Thomas v. Barry,
. Plaintiffs contend that Congress
could
regulate the states with regard to commuter taxes by "pass[ing] laws saying that states can’t tax commuters.” (Tr. at 10.) The truth of this statement is dubious, as "[i]n our system of government the States have ... complete dominion over all persons, property, and business transactions within their borders ... [and][t]he rights of the several States to exercise the widest liberty with respect to the imposition of internal taxes ... 'is an incident of sovereignty.' "
Shaffer,
. Maryland and Virginia do not impose taxes upon District residents who earn income within their borders. (See Maryland's Mot. to Dismiss at 6 n. 8; Amicus Brief of Fairfax County, et at. at 4; Tr. at 7.) Although many of the jurisdictions that elect not to tax commuters either impose no income tax at all, or reach reciprocal agreements with other jurisdictions to mutually forego nonresident tax collection, those exceptions nonetheless undermine the "universality” of the practice and illustrate its optional nature.
. Perhaps the more apрropriate analogy in this circumstance is between a state and its municipality. As a municipal subordinate of Congress, the District’s taxing rights are only as broad as the sovereign grants.
See, e.g., City of New York v. State,
.
See also Williams v. Vermont,
. The Court is mindful of the fact that the privileges and immunities cases plaintiffs cite require the taxing legislature to demonstrate a "substantial reason" for the discriminatory tax.
See, e.g., Lunding,
. Plaintiffs' attempt to defeat any rational basis on the basis of the tax cases they cite cannot succeed, even though the tax laws in those cases (except in
Allied
Stores) were found to have no rational basis. In those cases, the "promotion of domestic business by discriminating
against
nonresident competitors," as opposed to
for
them, was deemed illegitimate.
Metro. Life,
. Plaintiffs allege that "Congress may not impose income taxes at one rate for one state or area, and at a different rate for another state or area.” (Compl.i 59.) They draw an analogy to a hypothetical version of the recent Internet Tax Freedom Act, 47 U.S.C. § 151 (2002), to explain their Uniformity Clause argument. That legislation forbids any state from imposing taxes upon the internet. "Had Congress instead passed a law forbidding only the State of Rhode Island from taxing the internet, the law would not be uniform [and] would certainly be unconstitutional.” (Opp. at 46.)
. The other decisions plaintiffs cite that apply a Privileges and Immunities Clause analysis are
Austin v. New Hampshire,
