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Restoration of Voting Rights

Questions and Answers

How many people does felon disenfranchisement affect?
What are the laws governing felon disenfranchisement?
What are the rules governing felon re-enfranchisement in the states?
What are some of the problems associated with felon purges of voting lists?
What are the arguments against felon disenfranchisement?


How many people does felon disenfranchisement affect?

Today, over 4.65 million Americans are barred from voting because of felon disenfranchisement laws.

Sources/More Information:

About Felon Re-enfranchisement
(Demos)


What are the laws governing felon disenfranchisement?

Each state has different rules regarding when and whether individuals can vote once they have been convicted of a felony; individuals who are convicted of federal felonies fall under the felon disenfranchisement laws of the state of their residence. Thirteen states permanently disenfranchise convicted felons; eighteen states restore voting rights after completion of prison, parole, and probation; four states re-enfranchise felons after they have been released from prison and have completed parole; thirteen allow felons who have been released from prison to vote, and two states do not disenfranchise felons at all.

Sources/More Information:

Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States Fact Sheet
(Sentencing Project) July 2005


What are the rules governing felon re-enfranchisement in the states?

As with disenfranchisement laws, re-enfranchisement procedures also vary from state to state. In some states, it is very difficult for an ex-felon to get back on the voting list once he or she has been disenfranchised. Though some states automatically restore voting rights to all individuals once they have completed their sentence and related requirements, many others require felons to petition to have their rights restored before they can register.

Sources/More Information:

State-by-State Felon Voting Legislation
(Electionline.org)


What are some of the problems associated with felon purges of voting lists?

The process by which states disenfranchise convicted felons often causes the state to wrongly disenfranchise citizens who legitimately have the right to vote. The felony conviction databases that elections officials use to create their "purge lists" provide extremely limited and sometimes inaccurate or out-of-date information. According to a study conducted by the American Civil Liberties Union, a quarter of the 15 states surveyed had no legislation governing the amount of identifying information that must accompany felony conviction data; half of the states require that a felony conviction entry include the individual's name and address only, and the latter is often unreliable, if the individual moves. And only one state had passed legislation requiring that overturned felony convictions be noted in the database. Such a law would have been useful in Florida, which in 2004 erroneously purged 8000 individuals from its lists who had been convicted of misdemeanors, not felonies.

In many cases there is insufficient data to positively verify a match between a name in the felony conviction database and a name on the voter registration list. For example, if an individual has moved away from the address under which he or she registered to vote, the only piece of information election officials can use to verify a match is the name. This problem has resulted in countless people being purged from the voter rolls who had the right to vote. None of the states surveyed had passed legislation outlining matching standards or procedures.

In addition, two-thirds of the states surveyed do not notify individuals when they have been purged from the voter rolls to provide them with opportunity to rectify any errors or misunderstandings.

Sources/More Information:

Purged! Will Eligible Voters Be Purged From Election Rolls?
(ACLU, Demos, Right to Vote) October 2004


What are the arguments against felon disenfranchisement?

Once individuals convicted of felonies have served their time, the criminal justice system is devoted to rehabilitating them as active members in their communities; but denying these individuals the right to vote prevents them from participating in the civic life of their communities. The United States is the only democracy in the world that bans its felons from voting; Denmark, France, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Norway, Peru, Sweden, and Zimbabwe all allow their prisoners to vote.

In addition, felon disenfranchisement disproportionately affects minorities who have traditionally lacked government representation. More than 13 percent of all African-American men are disenfranchised, and African-American men make up more than 36 percent of the total disenfranchised population. The Latino community is also disproportionately affected by disenfranchisement laws: 16 percent of Latino men will serve time in prison, compared with 4.4 percent of white men.

Sources/More Information:

Punishing at the Polls: The Case Against Disenfranchising Citizens With Felony Convictions
Alex Ewald (Demos) 2003

Losing the Vote: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States
(Sentencing Project, Human Rights Watch) 1998