On November 11, 1921, three years to the day after the armistice that ended World War I, President Warren G. Harding presided over the dedication of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery. It was an emotional affair for Washington and the nation.
It’s Election Day, and hopefully most of you are braving the weather and the lines at your local polling place to make sure your voice is heard. If you cast your ballot for a presidential candidate in the District, you exercised a right that has only been around since 1961; that’s how long DC residents have had the right to vote in presidential elections, a right granted by the 23rd Amendment.
A quirky local superstition links Washington’s football fortunes to presidential outcomes: since the team arrived in 1937, the result of the Redskins’ last home game before Election Day has predicted with remarkable accuracy whether the incumbent party stays or gets voted out. It's a coincidence that raises a smile and a question about what sports weirdness might say about politics.