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Felons and the Right to Vote
About 4.7 million Americans, more
than 2 percent of the adult population, are barred from voting because of a
felony conviction. Denying the vote to ex-offenders is antidemocratic, and
undermines the nation's commitment to rehabilitating people who have paid
their debt to society. Felon disenfranchisement laws also have a sizable
racial impact: 13 percent of black men have had their votes taken away,
seven times the national average. But even if it were acceptable as policy,
denying felons the vote has been a disaster because of the chaotic and
partisan way it has been carried out.
Thirty-five states prohibit at least some people from voting after they have
been released from prison. The rules about which felonies are covered and
when the right to vote is restored vary widely from state to state, and
often defy logic. In four states, including New York, felons on parole
cannot vote, but felons on probation can. In some states, felons must
formally apply for restoration of their voting rights, which state officials
can grant or deny on the most arbitrary of grounds.
Florida may have changed the outcome of the 2000 presidential election when
Secretary of State Katherine Harris oversaw a purge of suspected felons that
removed an untold number of eligible voters from the rolls. This year, state
officials are conducting a new purge that may be just as flawed. They have
developed a list of 47,000 voters who may be felons, and have asked local
officials to consider purging them. But The Miami Herald found that more
than 2,100 of them may have been listed in error, because their voting
rights were restored by the state's clemency process. Last week, the state
acknowledged that 1,600 of those on the list should be allowed to vote.
Election officials are also far too secretive about felon voting issues,
which should be a matter of public record. When Ms. Harris used inaccurate
standards for purging voters, the public did not find out until it was too
late. This year, the state tried to keep the 47,000 names on its list of
possible felons secret, but fortunately a state court ruled this month that
they should be open to scrutiny.
There is a stunning lack of information and transparency surrounding felon
disenfranchisement across the country. The rules are often highly technical,
and little effort is made to explain them to election officials or to the
people affected. In New York, the Brennan Center for Justice at New York
University Law School found that local elections offices often did not
understand the law, and some demanded that felons produce documents that do
not exist.
Too often, felon voting is seen as a partisan issue. In state legislatures,
it is usually Democrats who try to restore voting rights, and Republicans
who resist. Recently, Republicans and election officials in Missouri and
South Dakota have raised questions about voter registration groups'
employment of ex-felons, although they have every right to be involved in
political activity. In Florida, the decision about whether a felon's right
to vote will be restored lies with a panel made up of the governor and
members of his cabinet. Some voting rights activists believe that Gov. Jeb
Bush has moved slowly, and reinstated voting rights for few of the state's
ex-felons, to help President Bush's re-election prospects.
The treatment of former felons in the electoral system cries out for reform.
The cleanest and fairest approach would be simply to remove the prohibitions
on felon voting. In his State of the Union address in January, President
Bush announced a new national commitment to helping prisoners re-enter
society. Denying them the right to vote belies this commitment.
Restoring the vote to felons is difficult, because it must be done state by
state, and because ex-convicts do not have much of a political lobby. There
have been legislative successes in recent years in some places, including
Alabama and Nevada. But other states have been moving in the opposite
direction. The best hope of reform may lie in the courts. The Atlanta-based
United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit and the San
Francisco-based Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit have ruled recently
that disenfranchising felons may violate equal protection or the Voting
Rights Act.
Until the whole idea of permanently depriving felons of their right to vote
is wiped away, the current rules should be applied more fairly. The quality
of voting roll purges must be improved. Florida should discontinue its
current felon purge until it can prove that the list it is using is
accurate.
Mechanisms for restoring voting rights to felons must be improved. Even in
states where felons have the right to vote, they are rarely notified of this
when they exit prison. Released prisoners should be given that information
during the discharge process, and helped with the paperwork. The process for
felons to regain their voting rights should be streamlined. In Nevada, early
reports are that the restoration of felon voting rights has had minimal
effect, because the paperwork requirements are too burdensome. Ex-felons who
apply to vote should have the same presumption of eligibility as other
voters.
Voting rights should not be a political football. There should be bipartisan
support for efforts to help ex-felons get their voting rights back, by
legislators and by state and local election officials. American democracy is
diminished when officeholders and political parties, for their own political
gain, try to keep people from voting.
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