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Norton Pushes for Go-Go Tribute While Reelection Questions Persist

District of Columbia Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D) has introduced legislation to rename a Northeast D.C. post office in honor of Chuck Brown, the late “Godfather of Go-Go” and one of the city’s most iconic musical figures.

The bill would designate the U.S. Postal Service facility at 3401 12th Street NE as the “Chuck Brown Post Office.” Norton said the legislation honors Brown’s cultural impact and political engagement, including his public support for D.C. statehood.

“Chuck Brown gave D.C. a unique hometown sound that was distinctly our own,” Norton said. “Go-go is the beat of D.C., giving D.C. its own musical identity and reminding the nation that D.C. has always been the hometown of talented artists.”

Brown, who died in 2012, taught himself to play guitar and went on to record 22 studio albums. He earned a Grammy nomination in 2010 and received a National Endowment for the Arts National Heritage Fellowship in 2005. 

The District’s longtime voice in Congress pointed to his performance at a 2010 statehood rally on the Capitol Grounds as an example of his lasting dedication to the city. 

“He loved the District,” she said, “and naming a post office after him is a way D.C. can honor him in return.”

The legislation comes as questions continue to swirl around Norton’s political future.

Although Norton has twice publicly said she plans to seek reelection, her office has issued conflicting statements. On June 10 and again on June 25, she told reporters she would run, most recently telling NBC News, “Yeah, I’m gonna run for reelection.” But in both instances, her office quickly responded that no final decision had been made and that she was still consulting with family and close advisers.

Norton, 88, has represented the District in the House since 1991. She remains one of the most senior members of Congress and a leading advocate for D.C. statehood. 

President Jimmy Carter appointed her as the first woman to chair the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 1977, and she came to Congress as a national civil rights figure and law professor.

As a legislator, Norton has brought key infrastructure, economic benefits, and autonomy efforts to the District. She has helped secure tuition subsidies for D.C. high school graduates attending college, introduced the $5,000 homebuyer tax credit that increased homeownership in the city, and brought thousands of jobs to the area through federal agency relocations and new development.

She currently serves as the Ranking Member of the House Subcommittee on Highways and Transit and sits on the Oversight and Reform Committee and the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

“Eleanor Holmes Norton is one of the few old Democrats that actually does good things,” one social media user wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Norton’s statement on the Chuck Brown legislation closed with a reminder of both D.C.’s culture and its ongoing fight for full representation. 

“We’ll never forget the free concert in 2010 Chuck Brown played in front of the Capitol for D.C. statehood and voting rights,” she said.

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