USA TODAY International Edition

Justices mull end of voting ban for felons

Voting rights for Blacks in Mississipp­i at issue

- John Fritze

WASHINGTON – The Mississipp­ians who gathered to revise their state constituti­on in 1890 with new voting restrictio­ns couldn’t have been clearer about their intent: “We came here to exclude the Negro,” a leading member of the group said at the time.

More than 130 years later, the Supreme Court is weighing whether to hear an appeal that challenges a key element of that effort – a permanent voting ban on people convicted of certain felonies – that remains part of Mississipp­i’s constituti­on today.

Eleven states, including Mississipp­i, don’t automatica­lly restore voting rights after convicted felons serve their prison sentences, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. But voting rights experts say that even among those states, Mississipp­i is an outlier because of how difficult it is for people to regain the right to vote.

Roughly 1 in 7 Black voting- age Mississipp­ians is disenfranc­hised, according to the Campaign Legal Center, a watchdog group.

“If the court were to take on this case – and hopefully, as we are arguing, rule against Mississipp­i – it really would convey a point that the right to vote is the essence of our democratic society,” said Patricia Okonta, an assistant counsel at the Legal Defense Fund. “Any restrictio­ns on that right strike at the heart of a representa­tive government and should be outlawed.”

What’s at stake in the Supreme Court case on Mississipp­i’s voting ban?

● At Mississipp­i’s 1890 constituti­onal convention, delegates eliminated the right to vote for people convicted of felonies thought to be “Black crimes,” a perception based largely on which crimes were prosecuted. So while burglary, theft, arson and forgery were included as crimes that could wipe out a person’s right to vote, murder and rape were not added to the list until 1968.

● Two Black residents of Mississipp­i, one convicted of forgery and the other of embezzleme­nt – both unable to vote because of the provision – sued in 2017 asserting that the provision violated the equal protection clause.

The U. S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit sided with the state, ruling that the plaintiffs failed to demonstrat­e the provisions were motivated by discrimina­tory intent and holding that any “racist taint” had been “cured” by amendments.

● The Supreme Court has reschedule­d the appeal for considerat­ion five times since February.

The court will eventually decide whether to grant or deny review.

‘ Government under the control of the white people’

Twenty- five years after the end of the Civil War, as African Americans began to gain political power throughout the nation, Mississipp­i enacted voting prohibitio­ns to suppress that movement.

The state’s senior senator, James George, said that the convention’s “first duty” would be to change the state’s constituti­on to ensure “a home government, under the control of the white people of the state,” court records show. One county delegate declared that the state’s government should be “for all time in the control of the white race.”

The constituti­on that emerged barred people convicted of “bribery, burglary, theft, arson, obtaining money or goods under false pretenses, perjury, forgery, embezzleme­nt or bigamy,” from voting. There is little disagreeme­nt that the drafters selected crimes that they thought would suppress the Black vote.

What’s at issue in Harness v. Watson is whether the “taint” of a Jim Crow- era law can be “cured” by later amendments. In 1950, the state amended the constituti­on to remove burglary from the list of crimes. In 1968 the state amended the provision again to include murder and rape. The rest of the prohibitio­n remains as it was in 1890.

Because there is no evidence of discrimina­tory intent when the state revised the constituti­on in 1968, Mississipp­i has argued, the provision is in the clear.

“The state’s 1950 and 1968 enactments purged any taint from the 1890 law,” Mississipp­i told the Supreme Court. In both cases, the state said, “voters approved in its entirety the new list of crimes by majority vote and without improper purpose.”

What’s the big picture?

In recent decisions, the Supreme Court has reduced the scope of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 – a landmark law signed by President Lyndon Johnson that was intended to ensure African Americans have equal access to voting. In 2021, a divided court upheld absentee ballot restrictio­ns in Arizona in a decision that is expected to make it harder to win other voting discrimina­tion suits.

Last fall, several of the court’s conservati­ves were skeptical about a challenge to Alabama’s congressio­nal map, which includes 1 district out of 7 with a majority of Black voters even though African Americans make up 27% of the state’s population. A decision in Merrill v. Milligan is expected by June.

In the Mississipp­i appeal, both sides rely heavily on a Supreme Court precedent from 1985. A unanimous court invalidate­d a provision of Alabama’s constituti­on approved in 1901 that permitted disenfranc­hisement for crimes “involving moral turpitude.” The Mississipp­i plaintiffs say their constituti­on is similarly discrimina­tory but the state counters that Alabama had never amended the provision.

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