[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 87 (Thursday, June 16, 2011)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E1121-E1122]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEMOCRACY RESTORATION ACT OF 2011
______
HON. JOHN CONYERS, JR.
of michigan
in the house of representatives
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to introduce the Democracy
Restoration Act of 2011. This legislation will serve to clarify and
expand voting rights, as well as assist former felons with their
reintegration into our democracy.
The Sentencing Project reports that, since 1997, 19 states have
amended felony disenfranchisement policies in an effort to reduce their
restrictiveness and expand voter eligibility. These reforms have
resulted in more than 760,00 citizens regaining their voting rights.
Yet, despite these reforms, an estimated 5 million people continue to
be ineligible to vote in Federal elections, including nearly 4 million
who reside in the 35 states that still prohibit some combination of
persons on probation, parole, and/or people who have completed their
sentence from voting.
I believe that there are three grave discrepancies in State laws
regarding felony convictions that lead to unfairness in Federal
elections. First, there is no uniform standard for voting in Federal
elections, which leads to an egregious disparity and unequal
participation in Federal elections based solely on where a person
lives. Second, laws governing the restoration of voting rights after a
felony conviction are unequal throughout the country and persons in
some States can easily regain their voting rights while in other States
persons effectively lose their right to vote permanently. Third, State
disenfranchisement laws disproportionately impact ethnic minorities,
thus adversely infringing upon citizens of these communities
constitutional right to vote.
These concerns about ex-offender disenfranchisement are not
rhetorical. In the past two election cycles, flawed voter purges have
deprived thousands of legitimate voters of their rights. For example,
an erroneous interpretation of state law by the Ohio Secretary of State
deprived thousands of ex-felons in that state of even the right to
register. Only Federal law can conclusively resolve the ambiguities in
this area plaguing our voting system.
Like the States, Congress has recognized the need to address the
barriers to full citizenship faced by ex-offenders. This voting
legislation is the next step in restoring the ex-felon community to
full citizenship. Denying voting rights to ex-offenders robs them of
the opportunity to fully participate and contribute to their society.
Disenfranchisement laws isolate and alienate ex-offenders, and have
been shown to serve as one more obstacle in their attempt to
successfully reintegrate into society. Moreover, these obstacles
adversely impact the voting participation of their families, further
undermining the effectiveness of our voting system.
This legislation is a narrowly crafted effort to expand voting rights
for ex-felons, while protecting State prerogatives to generally
establish voting qualifications. This legislation would only apply to
persons who have been released from prison, and it would only apply to
federal elections. Consequently, the bill is fully consistent with
constitutional requirements established by the Supreme Court in a
series of decisions upholding Federal voting rights laws.
In past Congresses, voting restoration legislation has been supported
by a broad coalition of groups interested in voting and civil rights,
including the NAACP, ACLU, the National Council of Churches (National
and Washington Office), the National Urban League, the Human Rights
Watch and the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights, among many others.
The practice of many states denying voting rights to former felons
represents a vestige
[[Page E1122]]
from a time when suffrage was denied to whole classes of our population
based on race, gender, religion, national origin, and property. Ex-
felons who have been lawfully released from prisons have paid their
debts to society. To continue denying them the ability to reclaim
rights as citizens resurrects historic unenlightened practices of our
society. Ultimately, I believe that we fail not only 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, it is long past time that these
restrictions be relegated to unenlightened history.
____________________