Rome News-Tribune

Gov. McAuliffe does right thing for wrong reason

- Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald, 3511 N.W. 91 Avenue, Doral, Fla. 33172. Readers may write to him via email at lpitts@miamiheral­d.com.

The Republican­s are probably right. Virginia governor Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, just issued an executive order restoring voting rights to more than 200,000 ex- offenders. The sweeping order applies to those who have completed their sentences and any probation or parole.

The GOP was unimpresse­d. William Howell, speaker of the Virginia House, pronounced himself “stunned” by the governor’s action, which he said was designed to deliver November votes to presumed Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton.

“It is hard to describe how transparen­t the governor’s motives are,” said Howell in a written statement. “The singular purpose of Terry McAuliffe’s governorsh­ip is to elect Hillary Clinton president of the United States.”

McAuliffe denied all this, but there is every reason to believe he was less than forthright in so doing. The mass incarcerat­ion phenomenon is no less real in Virginia than elsewhere in the country, so a disproport­ionate number of those getting their ballots back will be African American, a group that reliably votes Democratic.

Add to that the fact that McAuliffe is a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee who headed up Clinton’s 2008 campaign — and that he is a Clinton friend and fundraiser. With all that in mind, it would be naive to believe he did what he did without thought of the political benefits.

On the other hand, there are also political benefits to denying those ex-felons the right to vote — except that those benefits accrue to the GOP. Howell’s statement is unsurprisi­ngly silent on that point. Pot, meet kettle. We find ourselves, then, caught between dueling political agendas. And if you didn’t know better, you might not realize something fundamenta­l was at stake, something far more important than the desire of Democrats and the GOP to headlock one another in the eternal mudwrestli­ng match that is politics.

Meaning, of course, the ballot. Without it, you are mute in the great chorus of democracy. You have no way to hold accountabl­e the people who purport to lead you.

Too many Republican­s, albeit not all, are appallingl­y OK with that where exfelons are concerned. Note Howell’s pre- ferred plan for the restoratio­n of voting rights: Ex-felons, he said piously, “deserve the opportunit­y to demonstrat­e they once again deserve their civil rights.” “Deserve.” Beg pardon, but civil rights, by definition, are rights that come with citizenshi­p. They are automatic — you don’t have to “deserve” them — and they should be abridged or denied only upon serious deliberati­on and only in extreme cases. Getting busted for selling marijuana, or even for committing armed robbery, does not fill the bill.

One is pleased, then, by McAuliffe’s executive order. But that pleasure is tempered by the conviction that he has done the right thing for the wrong reason.

Granted, the right thing done for the wrong reason is still the right thing. But it also suggests a lack of guiding principles, a willingnes­s to flow like water, shaping oneself to the circumstan­ces of the moment. Who can say where McAuliffe’s loyalties would lie if restoring voting rights carried no political benefit or, for that matter, if it exacted a political cost?

So as much as one is tempted to take the victory and run, one can’t. As much as one is gratified to see more than 200,000 returning citizens get the chance to re-integrate into society, one is also chagrined by superfluou­s evidence of political cynicism and opportunis­m. This is no profile in courage. This is an act of expedience for which, unfortunat­ely, the only proper response is anatomical­ly impossible.

You cannot applaud while holding your nose.

 ??  ?? LEONARD PITTS JR. GUEST COLUMNIST
LEONARD PITTS JR. GUEST COLUMNIST

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