HR-5207-119
Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
Sponsored by Andrew Ogles (R-TN)
What it does
This bill would amend the District of Columbia Home Rule Act to allow the President to extend federal control over the Metropolitan Police Department (DC's local police force) in additional 30-day increments beyond the initial emergency period. To do so, the President would be required to send written notification to the chairmen and ranking minority members of the relevant House and Senate oversight committees, explaining why emergency conditions continue to exist. The bill would apply to any presidential emergency declaration in effect on or after the date of enactment.
Who benefits
The President and the executive branch, who would gain a formal, repeatable mechanism to extend federal police authority over DC without needing new congressional authorization each time. Federal law enforcement agencies coordinating with MPD during an extended emergency. Residents and businesses in DC who supporters argue would benefit from continued federal resources during a prolonged public safety emergency. Members of the relevant oversight committees, who would receive formal written notice of each extension.
Who is hurt
DC residents and the DC government, who would experience a longer potential suspension of local control over their police force. The DC Council and the Mayor, whose authority over the Metropolitan Police Department would be displaced for the duration of any extended emergency. DC residents broadly, who lack voting representation in Congress and therefore have limited ability to influence the federal officials making these decisions. Civil liberties organizations concerned about open-ended federal police authority over a civilian population.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that genuine public safety emergencies in the nation's capital — such as civil unrest, terrorism threats, or large-scale events — may last longer than the initial emergency period allows, and that the current law creates a cliff that forces federal resources to withdraw even when conditions have not stabilized. They contend that requiring written notification to bipartisan congressional leadership for each 30-day extension builds in meaningful oversight and transparency, ensuring the President cannot extend control silently or indefinitely without a documented justification on the record.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a mechanism for potentially indefinite federal takeover of a local police department, with only a notification requirement — not congressional approval — as a check, meaning Congress cannot block an extension it disagrees with. They contend that DC's unique lack of voting representation in Congress makes this especially problematic, as the residents most directly affected have no senators and only a non-voting House delegate, leaving them with no meaningful legislative recourse against repeated 30-day extensions of federal control over their local law enforcement.