Virginia Governor Bypasses Court Ruling To Help 200,000 Ex-Felons Vote

Discussion in 'Race, Religion, Science and Politics' started by OckyDub, Jul 23, 2016.

  1. OckyDub

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    Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) is taking action to restore the voting rights of thousands of ex-offenders in the state after a court decision Friday put them in jeopardy. He’s getting around the Virginia Supreme Court’s ruling against him by signing 200,000 individual clemency grants to the state’s ex-offenders to ensure their right to vote in November.

    In a 4 to 3 decision late Friday, the Supreme Court of Virginia stripped away the voting rights from 200,000 ex-offenders who had recently regained full civil rights through one of McAuliffe’s executive orders, effectively disenfranchising one in five of the state’s African American voters.

    The court said the governor lacks the authority under the state constitution to issue a blanket rights restoration to everyone in the state with a felony record who has already served their full sentence. A study earlier this year found that the vast majority of those impacted — 80 percent — committed non-violent crimes. Most have been out of prison for more than a decade, and African Americans are disproportionately represented. Forty-six percent of the ex-offenders are black, though blacks make up less than 20 percent of the state’s population.

    The non-partisan group that has for months been leading the charge on registering ex-offenders to vote, New Virginia Majority, released a statement saying the ruling “reaffirms the Commonwealth’s Jim Crow legacy,” noting that the vast majority of states restore voting rights upon release from prison.

    “Excluding Virginians from the ballot, even after they’ve paid their debts to society, is a cruel, inhumane reminder of past mistakes,” said Tram Nguyen, the group’s executive director. “Importantly, today’s ruling validates entrenched interests in the Virginia General Assembly bent on silencing a large swath of Black Virginians in order to maximize their political power.”

    But just hours after the decision, McAuliffe vowed to push back by signing clemency grants for the state’s ex-offenders one by one.

    “The struggle for civil rights has always been a long and difficult one, but the fight goes on,” he wrote. “I remain committed to moving past our Commonwealth’s history of injustice to embrace an honest process for restoring the rights of our citizens, and I believe history and the vast majority of Virginians are on our side.”

    With the November election between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump just few months away, Republicans have accused McAuliffe of pushing the voting rights restoration to help Clinton carry the swing state in the fall.

    Virginia, a long-time conservative stronghold, was key to President Obama’s 2008 and 2012 victories, and is considered a toss-up for 2016. Theoretically, if all 206,000 ex-offenders register to vote before the October deadline, they could decide who sits in the White House next year. The governor’s office says just 13,000 have registered so far, and the new need for individual clemency orders will likely slow down the registration process.

    This means legal uncertainty for people like Virginia native Randy Tyler, who lost his voting rights in 1995 due to a grand larceny conviction, and just regained them through the governor’s executive order this year.

    “Before, I felt like I was left out. I felt like even though I live in America, I wasn’t a part of it,” he told ThinkProgress. “But now, I have the privilege of saying who I want to elect for the presidency. I might be the one vote that makes a difference. I feel like a citizen of the United States again.”

    Virginia Governor Bypasses Court Ruling To Help 200,000 Ex-Felons Vote
     
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  2. OckyDub

    OckyDub is a Verified MemberOckyDub I gave the Loc'ness monstah about $3.50
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    Ha...he got the last laugh. Pure Dopeness.
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  3. ColumbusGuy

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    Is this saying that one if five African American elible voters In Virginia are convicted felons?-or am I reading it wrong. How can there be so many black 'felons' in Virginia-what, is spitting on the sidewalk a felony? If these were violent crimes I think 'we' would have heard about it ad nauseum. What are these crimes? Damn. And I thought Ohio was bad.

    I bet at least two thirds(and probably more) are stupid drug related crap. Legalize pot and even some of that other stuff. Incarceration should NOT be a damn industry. Violent criminals getting out early because of overcrowding because of these stupid drug 'crimes' smh.
     
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  4. Infinite_loop

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    I think it's one in five ex-felons who are African Americans.
     
  5. ColumbusGuy

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    No it is not saying that.

    'The sweeping order, in a swing state that could play a role in deciding the November presidential election, will enable all felons who have served their prison time and finished parole or probation to register to vote. Nearly half are African-American, a core constituency of Democrats, Mr. McAuliffe’s political party.'

    'Most have been out of prison for more than a decade, and African Americans are disproportionately represented. Forty-six percent of the ex-offenders are black, though blacks make up less than 20 percent of the state’s population.'

    So that is saying that nearly 100,000 out of the 200,00 are African American.

    I also found this:

    'Disenfranchised black males account for 35 percent of all Americans now barred from voting because of felony convictions. Two percent of all Americans, or 3.9 million, have lost the right to vote, compared with 13 percent of adult black men.'

    'In Virginia, 25 percent of otherwise eligible black men cannot vote.'
    Study: Non-Voting Felons Increasing

    It does say this about African American men. Which is ridiculous. It also says 80% are non-violent offenses. Again I think it is the stupid drug laws along with targeting black men(they are 'watched for criminal activity' way more than anyone else) and tougher sentencing along with ongoing poverty, etc.

    Even if only one if four(of the now enfranchised felons) vote, and vote or Clinton(awkward given what Bill did in 1994 and the Private prisons thing) that will mean 25,000 extra votes for the Democrats..that and having the VP from Virginia is an attempt to win this swing state.
     
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  6. DreG

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    More proof that the American prisons are modern slavery.Whatever his motives,I'm glad this guy flipped the script on the ruling.
     
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