Skip to main content

The Sentencing Project: Disenfranchisement News & Updates - 1/25/08

Submitted by dguard on
Florida: "Slow Going" Registration Efforts May Keep Hundreds of Thousands of Eligible Voters from Polls As the election year heats up, so do the emotions of hundreds of thousands of Florida citizens who expected to register to vote after the state's clemency board last year moved to make voting easier for non-violent offenders. "It's a slow process. It's slow going," said Muslima Lewis, an attorney with the ACLU and director of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition. "Individuals who were initially very encouraged in April of last year are now seeing that it's taking them a bit longer and with this being an election year people are getting more and more impatient." As a result of the efforts of Gov. Charlie Crist - whose election platform included rights restoration of formerly incarcerated individuals - about 45,000 individuals' rights have been restored since April. There remain, however, approximately 900,000 individuals who continue to wait to find out if their rights have been restored. In fact, 130,000 of those citizens are still waiting for their cases to be reviewed and have been told the process will take several months to a year, according to NPR's "All Things Considered." "That's very problematic," Lewis continued. "We are concerned about whether folks will actually be getting on the rolls in time to vote in November." The ACLU and other organizations continue to sponsor seminars to educate and register formerly incarcerated individuals. Alabama: "Let My People Vote" The Rev. Kenneth Glasgow this week visited several jails in Alabama to register inmates by today's voter registration deadline. During his "Let my people vote" registration campaign, which began on the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday, Glasgow brought voter re-instatement and registration forms for inmates to fill out, the Dothan Eagle reported. "Today, there are four times the amount of our people behind bars than the time Martin Luther King led the civil rights movement here in Alabama, but voter registration goes beyond just that. There's no better day to address this struggle than on his birthday," Rev. Glasgow, coordinator for the Alabama Alliance to Restore the Vote said. The state's primary is Feb. 5. Last year, Glasgow's registration efforts collected more than 10,000 applications. Prior to 2006, formerly incarcerated individuals who committed crimes of 'moral turpitude' were banned from voting. In 2006 Jefferson County Circuit Court Judge Robert Vance Jr. ordered voter registrars in Alabama counties to register former offenders unless legislation was signed stating otherwise and until 'moral turpitude' was defined. Additional coverage by the Montgomery Advertiser reported that county jail inmates are allowed to vote absentee, but it's up to the inmates to fill out the application. For more coverage, see the Enterprise Ledger. National: Presidential Candidates Should be Pressed by Reporters on Voting Rights In the Columbia Journalism Review's new series "Eight Questions Reporters Should Ask," Todd Gitlin explains the need for his column by saying: "My goal with this series is to highlight questions that, to my mind and to the best of my research, the press has not asked (or at least not asked often or insistently enough)." As a result Gitlin feels journalists should ask of presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama the following question: Nearly five million Americans-some 2% of the American electorate-cannot vote today because they have been convicted of felonies. In this regard the US is unusual among the world's democracies, which think that the rights of citizenship should be restored once a felon has served his or her sentence. Do you agree that former felons should regain the right to vote? - - - - - - Help The Sentencing Project continue to bring you news and updates on disenfranchisement! Make a contribution today. Contact Information - Email: [email protected], Web: http://www.sentencingproject.org
Permission to Reprint: This content is licensed under a modified Creative Commons Attribution license. Content of a purely educational nature in Drug War Chronicle appear courtesy of DRCNet Foundation, unless otherwise noted.