Washington, D.C. does not have a representative per se. Only states are allocated congressmen. Washington, D.C. and U.S. territories do have non-voting delegates. Washington, D.C. has one such delegate.
As of 2011, there are 90 women in the US congress - 17 of them are in the Senate, and 73 are in the House of Representatives. There are also three women serving as Delegates to the House: they are from Guam, the Virgin Islands and Washington, DC. And the leader of the Democrats (who are currently in the minority in the House) is a woman, Nancy Pelosi.
Compromise of 1850
Washington DC is actually not in a state at all. It is an individual district known as the District of Columbia. The land, taxes and local government structure are done as if it is a state. However it does not qualify as a state.
Washington, DC (District of Columbia), the United States' capital.
Documents are not assigned to states. A document is not notarized. A signature is. A notary licensed by the state of Maryland can notarize a signature that is signed in front of them if it is done so within the borders of Maryland. The location where the signor lives, where the document originates, or where the document will be used are irrelevant.
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nine
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i believe that new youk has 45 representatives.
Nine
DC would get Senators and Representatives.
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No. Washington, D.C. does not have any senators in the U.S. Senate or representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives.
The Congress member that represents you in Washington, DC is elected by the people in your district to represent the people's best interests. They serve in the US House of Representatives.
There are 435 voting representatives. There are also non-voting delegates from Washington DC, Puerto Rico, and many of the Pacific dependencies.
North Carolina has thirteen state representatives. Some current representatives are David Price, Mike McIntyre, Renee Elmer's, Howard Coble and Virginia Foxx.
there are no counties in Washington DC because Washington DC is a city itself.