The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate panel rebuffs felon voting rights

Inaction irks those in voting rights groups at meeting.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

A state Senate committee voted against restoring voting rights for any of Georgia’s 250,000 felons, recommendi­ng Wednesday that they remain disenfranc­hised after their release from prison.

Voting 3-2 along party lines, the study committee opposed lifting the state’s restrictio­n on voting by nonviolent felons when they’re still paying off fines or on parole or probation.

The Georgia Senate unanimousl­y approved studying felon voting rights earlier this year, but the committee opposed proposing legislatio­n that would permit some of them to vote while they reintegrat­e into society.

State Sen. Randy Robertson, a Republican from Cataula, said felonies are serious crimes that come with consequenc­es such as losing voting rights.

“If an individual chooses to commit a felony, then they choose to surrender their right to vote as stated in the Georgia Constituti­on,” said Robertson, the chairman of the Senate Study Committee on Revising Voting Rights for Nonviolent Felons.

The senators’ inaction frustrated members of voting rights groups in the audience, some

of whom carried signs saying, “Everyone deserves second chances” and “When a debt is

paid, it’s paid.”

Helen Butler, the leader of a Georgia civil rights organizati­on, said the state is falling behind other Southern states such as Alabama, Florida and Mississipp­i that have taken steps toward allowing some nonviolent felons to regain their ability to participat­e in elections.

“They come back to their community, and they’re contributi­ng to their community, but they don’t have their voting rights,” said Butler, the executive director of the Georgia Coalition for the People’s Agenda. “Leaving it as the status quo does nothing.”

Georgia is one of 22 states that denies felons the ability to vote after they’ve been released from prison until they fulfill all the obligation­s of their sentences, including probation and fees.

Democrats on the study committee supported a proposal to define a list of 127 felonies, including murder and perjury, that would leave convicts without voting rights until fully completing their sentences. Those found guilty of less serious felonies, such as drug possession and shopliftin­g, would have been able to vote after their release from incarcerat­ion.

“We’ve narrowed down these issues and said, ‘This is how we should present a bill,’” said state Sen. Harold Jones, a Democrat from Augusta. “If we don’t, it’s just because persons don’t want to do it, and that’s not right.”

Under the Georgia Constituti­on, those who have been convicted of a “felony involving moral turpitude” can’t be registered to vote until their sentences are completed. But the state hasn’t defined which felonies involve “moral turpitude,” and election officials interpret the constituti­on to mean that all felonies limit voting rights.

The Senate study committee met three times to hear from groups representi­ng voters, victims, law enforcemen­t and criminal justice advocates.

The senators were tasked with “understand­ing that a blanket prohibitio­n on nonviolent felons having the right to vote does not serve the state’s compelling interest,” according to Senate Resolution 153.

Though no bills will come from the committee, Jones said he will continue pushing to reinstate felon voting rights in next year’s legislativ­e session. He previously introduced a measure that would do so, Senate Bill 11, but it didn’t receive a hearing this year.

Michelle Sanchez of the New Georgia Project, a voter registrati­on group, said she’s disappoint­ed that nonviolent felons are no closer to regaining their right to cast a ballot.

“This whole thing was pointless. It was a dog-andpony show,” Sanchez said about the study committee. “They weren’t really trying to make any changes.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Some members of the gallery stand silently with signs after Wednesday’s vote that came after a brief discussion by the Georgia Senate study committee on felon voting rights. The committee voted to maintain the status quo.
PHOTOS BY BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Some members of the gallery stand silently with signs after Wednesday’s vote that came after a brief discussion by the Georgia Senate study committee on felon voting rights. The committee voted to maintain the status quo.

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