The Niagara Falls Review

Florida passes amendment to restore felons’ voting rights

- TAMARA LUSH

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. — Florida added 1.4 million possible voters to the rolls when it passed Amendment 4.

That says most felons will automatica­lly have their voting rights restored when they complete their sentences and probation.

“This was not a political vote. It was a vote of love,” said Desmond Meade, president of the Florida Rights Restoratio­n Coalition, the non-profit group that spearheade­d to put the amendment change on the ballot.

Convicted sex offenders and those convicted of murder are exempt.

The measure needed 60 per cent of the vote Tuesday to pass. It received 64 per cent of the vote.

Supporters said the state’s current system was too difficult and arbitrary.

It required felons to wait at least five years after completing their sentence before they could file a request with the governor and cabinet — who then considered the requests individual­ly.

Florida’s long been considered “ground zero” for disenfranc­hised felons by voting rights groups.

Voting rights advocates say there are about 1.7 former felons in Florida, and about 1.4 million people will be able to vote. Nearly all states allow felons to vote after completing their sentences.

“I’m thrilled that the people of Florida finally brought the state out of the 19th century and into the 21st century,” ACLU Florida director Howard Simon said.

Many political watchers on both sides have wondered how this group of people will affect the hotly contested 2020 election.

“The battle for the hearts and minds for those 1.4 million voters has officially begun,” said Neil Volz, also of the Florida Rights Restoratio­n Coalition.

He added that about a third of the 1.4 million people affected are African American.

The largest percentage of disenfranc­hised felons are white, he said.

“Every community is impacted by this,” said Volz.

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