270208 - As I raced into our TV studio for
our Super Tuesday morning-after show, I was excited. Across the country,
initial reports indicated there was unprecedented voter participation,
at least in the Democratic primaries, several times higher than in
previous elections. For years I have covered countries like Haiti, where
people risk death to vote, while the U.S. has one of the lowest
participation rates in the industrialized world. Could it be this year
would be different?
Then I bumped into a friend and asked if he had voted.
“I can’t vote,” he said, “because I did time in prison.” I asked him if
he would have voted. “Sure I would have. Because then I’m not just
talking junk, I’m doing something about it.”
Felony disenfranchisement is the practice by state
governments of barring people convicted of a felony from voting, even
after they have served their time. In Virginia and Kentucky, people
convicted of any felony can never vote again (this would include
“Scooter” Libby, even though he never went to jail, unless he is
pardoned). Eight other states have permanent felony disenfranchisement
laws, with some conditions that allow people to rejoin the voter rolls:
Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Florida, Mississippi, Nevada, Tennessee and
Wyoming.
Disenfranchisement—people being denied their right to
vote—takes many forms, and has a major impact on electoral politics. In
Ohio in 2004, stories abounded of inoperative voting machines, too few
ballots or too few voting machines. Then there was Florida in 2000. Many
continue to believe that the election was thrown to George W. Bush by
Ralph Nader, who got about 97,000 votes in Florida. Ten times that
number of Floridians are prevented from voting at all. Why? Currently,
more than 1.1 million Floridians have been convicted of a felony and
thus aren’t allowed to vote. We can’t know for sure how they would have
voted, but as scholar, lawyer and activist Angela Davis said recently in
a speech honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Mobile, Ala., “If we had
not had the felony disenfranchisement that we have, there would be no
way that George Bush would be in the White House.”
Since felony disenfranchisement disproportionately
affects African-American and Latino men in the U.S., and since these
groups overwhelmingly vote Democratic, the laws bolster the position of
the Republican Party. The statistics are shocking. Ryan King, policy
analyst with The Sentencing Project in Washington, D.C., summarized the
latest:
About 5.3 million U.S. citizens are ineligible to
vote due to felony disenfranchisement; 2 million of them are African-American.
Of these, 1.4 million are African-American men, which translates into an
incredible 13 percent of that population, a rate seven times higher than
in the overall population. Forty-eight states have some version of
felony disenfranchisement on the books. All bar voting from prison, then
go on to bar participation while on parole or probation. Two states,
Maine and Vermont, allow prisoners to vote from behind the walls, as
does Canada and a number of other countries.
The politicians and pundits are all abuzz with the
massive turnouts in the primaries and caucuses. There are increasing
percentages of women participating, and initial reports point to more
young people. The youth vote is particularly important, as young people
have less invested in the status quo and can look with fresh eyes at
long-standing injustices that disenfranchise so many. In this context,
one of The Sentencing Project’s predictions bears repeating here: “Given
current rates of incarceration, 3 in 10 of the next generation of black
men can expect to be disenfranchised at some point in their lifetime. In
states that disenfranchise ex-offenders, as many as 40 percent of black
men may permanently lose their right to vote.”
The Sentencing Project’s King said: “We are constantly
pushing for legislative change around the country. But public education
is absolutely key. There are so many different laws that people simply
don’t know when their right to vote has been restored. That includes the
personnel who work in state governments giving out the wrong information.”
I called my friend to tell him he was misinformed. He
hadn’t been on probation or parole for years. “You can vote,” I told him.
“You just have to register.” I could hear him smile through the phone.
Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!” a daily
international TV/radio news hour airing on 650 stations in North America.
© 2008 Amy Goodman - Distributed by King Features
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