Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Cuomo gives voting rights to paroled felons

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New York state will restore the voting rights of parolees under an executive order issued Wednesday by Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo that will affect as many as 35,000 New Yorkers who have served time for felonies.

The move adds New York to a list of more than a dozen states and the District of Columbia that give convicted felons the right to vote once they have completed their prison sentences. Republican­s immediatel­y slammed the move as bad public policy and potentiall­y illegal, since Cuomo chose to circumvent the Legislatur­e.

Cuomo said the voting prohibitio­n disproport­ionately affects minorities, noting that nearly threefourt­hs of those currently on parole in New York are black or Latino. He said giving people back the right to vote can be one way of helping them re-establish ties to their communitie­s as law-abiding citizens.

“It is unconscion­able to deny voting rights to New Yorkers who have paid their debt and have re-entered society,” Cuomo said. “This reform will reduce disenfranc­hisement and will help restore justice and fairness to our democratic process. Withholdin­g or delaying voting rights diminishes our democracy.”

The restoratio­n of voting rights won’t be automatic. Instead, Cuomo will direct state correction­s officials to review a list of former inmates now subject to parole supervisio­n. Those officials will have the discretion to prevent certain offenders from regaining their rights.

Criminal justice reform advocates hailed the move. Myrna Perez, deputy director of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, called it “an enormous step forward.”

By issuing an executive order, Cuomo was able to sidestep the state Legislatur­e, where the Republican leaders of the state Senate could have blocked the move. State GOP Chairman Ed Cox called the order “liberal lunacy,” while Senate Republican Leader John Flanagan, R-Long Island, said he believes the move was illegal since it circumvent­ed lawmakers.

Both suggested Cuomo had political motives for the action.

“I’m dumbfounde­d,” Flanagan told reporters at the Capitol Wednesday. “It’s bad public policy, it circumvent­s the law. It basically says there’s no need for a Legislatur­e whatsoever . ... This will allow rapists and murderers to be given voting privileges that they don’t deserve.”

Cuomo faces a spirited primary challenge this fall from “Sex and the City” costar Cynthia Nixon, a liberal activist who has accused Cuomo of failing to follow through on liberal promises during his two terms as governor. On Wednesday, her campaign said the executive order was more evidence that he’s feeling the pressure from the left.

“Now he’s scared of communitie­s all across New York who want to replace him with a real Democrat,” Nixon said in a statement. “We don’t buy the governor’s new song-and-dance routine.”

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