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Amendment XXIII was the '''twenty-third Amendment ''' to the United States Constitution which permits the District Of Columbia to choose Electors for President and Vice President . The amendment was proposed by Congress on June 17 , 1960 , and ratified by the states on March 29 , 1961 . TEXT
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA VOTING RIGHTS The District of Columbia was originally envisioned as a center of government, not of population. Nevertheless, in 1960 , the District had a greater population than thirteen of the fifty states. The District, however, did not have the power to select members of the Electoral College in Presidential Elections ; the problem was addressed by the amendment. The District of Columbia may now choose, in such a manner as Congress directs, as many Electors as could a state of its population, as each state chooses as many Electors as it has Senators and Representatives in Congress . The District, however, may not in any event choose more Electors than the least populous state. Since Wyoming , the least populous state (with a population of under 500,000 according to the 2000 Census , chooses only three Electors, the District of Columbia is currently limited to a maximum of three Electors. While this limit cost the District one electoral vote in Presidential Elections from 1964 through 1980 , when the District's population would have otherwise entitled it to four Electors, the population of the District as of the 1980 United States Census and each United States Census since then would have entitled it to just three electoral votes anyway. The amendment does not make the District of Columbia a state and does not grant it representation in the United States Congress. In 1978 , Congress proposed an amendment that would have permitted the District of Columbia to choose Electors, Representatives and Senators just like a state. However, that amendment expired by its own terms in 1985 , having failed to be ratified by the required three-quarters majority of the states. REFERENCES
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