WASHINGTON – The Biden administration has tacitly reached out to Congressional Democrats for a possible change in their high-profile but long-term efforts to transform most of the District of Columbia into the country’s 51st state, according to Congressional and Legislative officials.

The bill, which passed last month but has great prospects in the Senate, would allow the District of Columbia’s residential and commercial zones as a new state, leaving a rump enclave that includes the seat of government, including the Capitol. White House, Supreme Court, other federal buildings and monuments.

The deliberations are focused on the 23rd amendment to the Constitution, which gives the seat of government three electoral college votes in presidential elections. If it is not repealed after a statehood, the bill would try to block the appointment of the three presidential voters. But the government reportedly suggested giving them to the referendum winner instead.

Officials familiar with the discussion, speaking on condition of anonymity, cited the political delicacy of the matter at a time when Republicans were raising legal and political objections to statehood for the District of Columbia’s 700,000 residents. Such a move would create two extra seats in the Senate, which the Democrats would most likely win, and give the only representative in the house a vote.

A White House attorney, however, acknowledging cross-industry dialogue between Democrats, said: “The approval of DC as a state is in the power of Congress – arguments to the contrary are unfounded. But we also believe that there are ways to address the concerns raised, so we’re working with Congress to make the bill as strong as possible. “

In late April, the White House approved the statehood law in a policy statement. However, one overlooked line also suggested that part of the legislation known as HR 51 had given President Biden’s legal team a break.

“The government looks forward to working with Congress as HR 51 goes through the legislative process to ensure that it is consistent with Congress’s constitutional responsibility and power to legislate new states into the Union,” she said.

Should political conditions ever change so much that one day the Senate approves statehood for the District of Columbia, which would be the smallest state by area, though its population exceeds Vermont and Wyoming, Republican-controlled states are generally expected to: that they question its constitutionality.

The Supreme Court could dismiss such a case on the grounds that it raises the kind of issue that the politically elected branches must decide. In 1875 she turned down a case in which the retrocession of a former portion of the district to Virginia from 1845 was challenged in part because of such logic. However, if the judges achieved the legal merit, they would face several new issues.

Democrats generally agree that two legal objections have been raised by Republicans to the bill – that Maryland may need to approve statehood because the land was in that state’s jurisdiction prior to 1790, and that it could be unconstitutional, the size of the federal Enclave ownership downsizing the seat of government – are less serious threats. They do not see these arguments as being supported by the explicit text of the relevant parts of the Constitution.

But how best to navigate the 23rd Amendment if it’s not lifted gave the administration’s legal team a bigger break, officials said. The amendment says that the seat of the federal government should “appoint” three presidential elections.

It is not clear how many, if any, potential voters would be left there. The only place of residence in the Rumpf federal enclave would be the White House; Presidential families traditionally vote in their home states, but nothing forces them to. Theoretically, homeless people could also claim a residence in the planned enclave.

As a fallback, if the change is not swiftly repealed, the statehood law would make two changes to the law: legal residents of the enclave – if any – could vote in their former states by postal vote, and legal process for the nomination of voters would do be repealed.

However, one opponent of the bill, Roger Pilon, a former Reagan administration official and legal scholar at the Cato Libertarian Institute, argued that this mechanism would not work. Congress, he said in a prepared testimony from the House earlier this year, could not use a law to overturn a constitutional directive or to lose people’s constitutional rights.

Democrats discuss changing the bill to use a different mechanism. Rather than trying to block the nomination of voters for the federal seat, Congress would pass law that determines them in a specific way. (The 23rd amendment says that the federal seat presidential election should be “appointed in a manner that Congress can instruct”.)

One way is to add these three votes to the total number of candidates who otherwise won the electoral college. Another option is to give them to the winner of the national referendum, which, if the election is very close, could change the outcome.

It is unclear whether such a change would reflect legal concerns or whether it is a smarter political approach.

Politically, handing voters over to the referendum winner could encourage Republican-controlled state lawmakers to work together to swiftly repeal the amendment rather than hampering partisan efforts: Republican presidential candidates have won that twice since 2000 Electoral college despite the loss of the referendum.

The idea of ​​the referendum was proposed last year by Columbia University’s two law professors, Jessica Bulman-Pozen and Olatunde Johnson.

Bulman-Pozen, who served in the Justice Department’s legal department during the Obama administration, said she believed that the Supreme Court believed the existing law was constitutional but she disagreed that it is as “elegant” as giving these votes to the winner of the referendum.

“I don’t think it fits the text best,” she said of the bill’s current approach, adding, “Congress has other options to consider – even if it is on repealing the 23rd Amendment hopes. “

But Mr Pilon was also skeptical of the proposed revision, arguing that it would undermine the spirit of the 23rd Amendment.

“The whole business is an extraordinarily complicated effort to get around the fact” that the District of Columbia “was never seen as the source of any future state,” he said.

The considerations take place against the background of the growing – but incomplete – support of the Democratic Party for statehood. Proponents seek to bolster that support to lay the groundwork for the bill to be passed when conditions change.

“I am actively working with my Democratic and Republican colleagues to stand up for DC statehood because this is not a partisan issue, but a question of basic fairness and equal representation of all citizens,” said Senator Thomas R. Carper, a Democrat Delaware who picked up the coat for the Senate cause.

A major obstacle is the Senate’s filibuster rule; It would take 10 Republicans and all 50 Democrats to overcome this. Although the bill has a record number of Democratic co-sponsors, including New Hampshire Senator Jeanne Shaheen this week, four lawmakers have not signed up, according to Carper’s office. These four include Senator Kyrsten Sinema from Arizona, who sits on the equally divided committee responsible for law enforcement.

Another, Senator Joe Manchin III, a Democrat of West Virginia, recently told a radio broadcast that he believed a constitutional amendment was needed to allow the District of Columbia as a state. He cited the history of the debate over ways to fully represent residents, including the comments of some prominent Democratic legal officials in the 1960s and 1970s.

However, other Democrats have indicated that the context of these historical commentaries has centered on proposals that differed from the idea of ​​this era.

On the day of Mr Manchin’s remarks, a delegate, Eleanor Holmes Norton, the non-voting district representative and main sponsor of the bill in the House of Representatives, issued a statement refuting the idea that an amendment to the constitution was necessary. As part of that argument, she addressed the alternative approach that the Biden team has privately called for.

“Congress could, for example, choose to assign voters to the electoral college winner or to the national referendum to prevent the reduced federal district from controlling the votes,” she said.