Post Tribune (Sunday)

Give some political power to felons who’ve done time

- By Sharion Scott Tribune Content Agency Sharion Scott is a staff attorney at the Advancemen­t Project, a civil rights advocacy organizati­on.

Researcher­s heralded the 2020 presidenti­al election as having record turnout, with two-thirds of eligible voters casting a ballot. Yet, people overlook how this calculatio­n excluded 5.1 million potential voters.

Currently, 48 states deem some residents ineligible to vote if they have a felony conviction. No matter how long ago that conviction occurred, or how the person’s life may have changed since, states restrict their right to participat­e in elections.

While there is a growing trend toward modifying state laws to make voting easier for those with felony conviction­s, other states remain committed to suppressin­g votes.

Even where advocates and policymake­rs have tried to change antiquated laws and improve systems, the most egregious states refuse to improve. They continue to treat voting as a privilege instead of the right it actually is.

Where these states insist on acting against full democracy for their residents, Congress is in a unique position to assure the basic right for all to have a voice in our political process. By passing the For the People Act — which the House passed in March as HR 1 and is now awaiting debate in the Senate as S 1 — we can make history in expanding the franchise to millions.

Disenfranc­hisement of felons has existed for centuries.

But beginning in the 1890s it was strategica­lly used in the United States to minimize the Black electorate, especially in Southern states. Legislatur­es created laws to permanentl­y remove a person’s right to vote — or to only restore that right if certain requiremen­ts were satisfied, many of which were unfair, confusing and burdensome to navigate.

Today, these laws continue to lock millions out the electoral process, disproport­ionately affecting voters of color.

Advocates have worked to reform these laws, crafting bills to simplify criteria and pushing state constituti­onal amendments to expand access. In spite of several significan­t wins in the last decade, states including Mississipp­i, Tennessee, Florida and Wisconsin adamantly persist in denying millions a full place in society.

According to a new report from my organizati­on, the Advancemen­t Project, Mississipp­i is one of the worst violators. The state’s highly punitive law disenfranc­hises 235,150 Mississipp­ians — 1 out of every 10 people in the state’s voting-age population. For Black Mississipp­ians the number is even higher: 1 in 7. Residents can only restore their rights by obtaining an individual order from the governor or winning passage of an individual bill by the legislatur­e. That process in particular is inaccessib­le and arbitrary, with legislator­s passing a very small percentage of such proposed bills.

In the decade ending in 2017, for example only 45 people had their voting rights restored through legislatio­n. Every year, legislator­s deny thousands of taxpaying citizens the right to choose their representa­tives and support measures that impact their communitie­s. Mississipp­i lawmakers send their residents a clear message: We refuse to give up our oppressive and discrimina­tory system.

Florida is another place where the legislatur­e is failing to act in the interest of its residents. In November 2018, more than 64% of Floridians voted to restore voting rights to more than 1.4 million people.

The following spring, though, legislator­s reversed one of the largest expansions of voting rights in decades. It passed a bill requiring payment of legal fines and fees before a person could vote. These additional barriers drasticall­y shrank the number of newly eligible voters and made a person’s right to vote dependent on wealth.

Florida lawmakers clearly chose suppressio­n over the will of the people.

Congress has an opportunit­y to remedy state inaction and voter suppressio­n by passing the For the People Act, which President Joe Biden says he’s eager to sign. The comprehens­ive legislatio­n includes a provision that ensures everyone with a felony conviction may vote in federal elections if they are not currently incarcerat­ed. The provision would supersede state felony disenfranc­hisement laws and expand the number of eligible voters for federal elections to millions across the country. Voting rights would no longer depend on geography or the whims of elected officials. All voters would be on equal footing.

The only way our democracy can thrive and truly represent the will of the people is if everyone has a voice in the trajectory of our country. People who live, work in and contribute to our communitie­s deserve to have a voice in what happens to them and their families. Congress has the power and opportunit­y to give them this assurance by passing the For the People Act.

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