[Congressional Record Volume 151, Number 32 (Wednesday, March 16, 2005)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E453-E454]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CIVIC PARTICIPATION AND REHABILITATION ACT OF 2005
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HON. JOHN CONYERS, JR.
of michigan
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, March 15, 2005
Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to introduce the Civic
Participation and Rehabilitation Act of 2005, legislation that will
provide persons who have been released from incarceration the right to
vote in Federal elections.
With just two states, Maine and Vermont, placing no restrictions on
the voting rights of offenders or ex-offenders, the United States may
have the most restrictive disenfranchisement policy in the world. Such
prohibitions on the right to vote undermine both the voting system and
the fundamental rights of ex-offenders. This legislation will serve to
clarify and expand voting rights, as well as assist former felons with
their reintegration into our democracy.
This past November it was estimated that approximately 2.3 percent of
the voting age population, about 5 million people, were prohibited from
voting because of state felon disenfranchisement laws. While it is
undeniable that this group of disqualified voters was large enough to
influence the outcome of close elections, partisan concerns obscure the
fact that our varied, state-by-state approaches to ex-offender voting
rights leads to confusion and disenfranchisement of legitimate voters
under these existing laws. In the past two election cycles, flawed
voter purges have deprived legitimate voters of their rights. Moreover,
in Ohio, an erroneous interpretation of state law by the Secretary of
State deprived thousands of ex-felons of even the right to register.
Only federal law can conclusively resolve the ambiguities in this area
plaguing our voting system.
In addition to tainting this country's fundamental principle of the
right to vote, denying voting rights to ex-offenders denies them of the
opportunity to fully participate and contribute to their society.
Disenfranchisement laws isolate and alienate ex-offenders, and serve as
one more obstacle in their attempt to successfully reintegrate into
society. Restricting voting rights, a critical tool of self-
empowerment, can only lead to higher rates of recidivism, community
apathy, and other social ills. We fail not just ex-offenders by denying
them the right to vote, but the rest of a society that has struggled
throughout its history to be legitimate and inclusive. Just like poll
taxes and literacy tests prevented an entire class of
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citizens, namely African Americans, from integrating into society after
centuries of slavery, felon disenfranchisement laws prevent ex-
offenders from reintegrating into society after retribution.
Statistics on felon disenfranchisement indicate that Congressional
action is clearly warranted. The Sentencing Project estimates that 4.7
million Americans, or 1 in 43 adults, have currently or permanently
lost the right to vote as a result of a felony conviction. 1.4 million
or 13 percent of African American men are disenfranchised, a rate seven
times the national average. Given current rates of incarceration, 3 in
10 of the next generation of African American men can expect to be
disenfranchised at some point in their lifetime. An estimated 676,730
women are currently ineligible to vote as a result of a felony
conviction. These statistics have prompted state responses. Most
recently, Alabama, Nevada, Wyoming, and Connecticut, have adopted
legislation that expands voting rights for ex-felons. We must now act
at the Federal level.
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