Kenyan McDuffie didn’t campaign for votes inside jail, D.C. officials say
District correction officials on Wednesday categorically denied that D.C. Council member-elect Kenyan McDuffie visited the city jail to convince inmates to vote for him in the May 15 special election, squashing rampant rumors and online listserv chatter about his alleged campaign tactics.

Kenyan McDuffie, candidate for the DC Council Ward 5 , voted at Mt. Bethel Baptist Church in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday, May 15, 2012. He is holding daughter Jozi, 2.
(HO - Tony Ponds/Courtesy of Kenyan McDuffie campaign)
“Please be advised that there is no truth to the allegations made regarding Kenyan McDuffie’s visits to the D.C. Jail as a council candidate,” said Sylvia Lane, a spokeswoman for the D.C. Department of the Corrections. “We have fully reviewed our visitation records and found without question, that he has not been in the facility. “
McDuffie, who won a landslide victory to replace former council member Harry Thomas Jr. (D-Ward 5), will be sworn in May 30 after his election is certified.
But in the days since his victory, McDuffie’s has been dogged by continued gossip that he may have improperly pressured inmates at the jail to vote for him by absentee ballot.
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02:54 PM ET, 05/23/2012 |
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D.C. protesters bring local problems to ‘pretend Mayor’ Trent Franks’ office
D.C. activists may not have a vote in Congress, but they do have props and sarcasm, and they brought plenty of both to a protest outside Rep. Trent Franks’s office Wednesday.
D.C. Vote organized the rally outside the Arizona Republican’s office in the Rayburn Building in response to the hearing Franks held last week on his bill that would ban all abortions in the District after 20 
D.C. protesters came to Rep. Trent Franks’ office Wednesday, but he wasn’t there. (AP Photo/Matt York)weeks’ pregnancy. Local leaders view the bill as an intrusion on the city’s self-governance, while Frank, a strong abortion opponent, has pointed out that the Constitution grants Congress the authority to “exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever” in the District.
In that case, the protesters reasoned, Franks must be interested in solving all kinds of other local problems. But when they went to his office Wednesday to ask for help, the door was locked. The phones went straight to a full voice mail box. With the House on recess this week, Franks was likely out of town.
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02:14 PM ET, 05/23/2012 |
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Sulaimon Brown calls on Gray to step down following guilty plea by mayor’s campaign aide
Sulaimon Brown, the former mayoral candidate who said he was paid and promised a city job by Mayor Vincent C. Gray’s campaign, thanked federal investigators for their “hard work” Wednesday — a day after a friend of the mayor pleaded guilty to providing funds to Brown and destroying the evidence that showed a record of the payments.
“I was not looking for vindication for truth need not be vindicated,” Brown released a statement by e-mail. “I was seeking justice.”
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11:41 AM ET, 05/23/2012 |
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Norton protests as House calls for military personnel to be exempt from D.C. gun laws
The House approved a non-binding measure late Thursday night calling for active-duty military personnel to be exempt from the District’s gun laws, the latest in a series of issues that have divided Congress and local leaders.

(Ricky Carioti)
The “Sense of Congress” resolution — offered by Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-Ga.) as an amendment to the massive Defense authorization bill — has no force of law and passed by voice vote, without a roll call. But it still drew a harsh response from Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D), who was already smarting from being denied the chance to testify Thursday at a hearing on a measure that would ban late-term abortions in the District.
“If Representative Gingrey believes that active duty military personnel should be exempt from federal or state or local firearms laws, why did he not offer an amendment that would apply nationwide?” Norton asked on the House floor Thursday night. “Perhaps he did not offer such an amendment for the same reason that the Republican sponsor of the bill to ban abortions after 20 weeks in the District of Columbia did not introduce a 20-week bill that would apply nationwide, either. They pick on D.C. because they think they can.”
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11:28 AM ET, 05/18/2012 |
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Google’s self-driving car makes D.C. Council members giddy

(Tim Craig/The Washington Post)
Marveling over what they billed as the potential future for getting around town, D.C. Council members Mary Cheh and Tommy Wells took a quick spin Thursday in Google’s new self-driving car.
Cheh (D-Ward 3), chairwoman of the Committee on the Environment, Public Works and Transportation, and Wells (D-Ward 6) rode about 10 blocks in the self-driving Toyota Prius following a briefing with Google officials at the company’s Washington office on New York Avenue NW.
“It would enable people who are not able to drive, people who are blind or disabled, it would enable them to drive a car,” Cheh said after the trip. “It would also have an extraordinary impact on parking, and traffic itself, because cars are idle about 90 percent of the time…so cars could be used by more than one person. You could get out of your car and tell it to go find a parking space.”
Google received a special permit from the District to bring the prototype of the car to city and test drive it on city streets – so long as there was someone in the vehicle who could manually control it at a moment’s notice.
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01:47 PM ET, 05/17/2012 |
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