Washington DC to become one of the only places in US to let prisoners vote
Washington
DC is set to allow imprisoned people to vote, a significant move because US
states have long disenfranchised those with felony convictions, even after they
have served their sentences behind bars.
There
were more than 6 million Americans who were unable to vote in the 2018 midterms
because of a felony conviction. Washington DC’s plan would put the US Capitol
in line with just two other states in the country.
Washington
DC has a very high incarceration rate and up to 4,500 people could be affected
by the measure, included in emergency police reform legislation that passed the
city council this week.
“Expanding
voting rights to persons in prison is a historic step for American democracy,”
said Nicole Porter, director of advocacy at the Sentencing Project, a criminal
justice reform group, in a statement. “I am hopeful that the District’s action
will inspire states to recognize the value of universal suffrage and the
engagement of all its citizens.”
The
US has some of the strictest policies in the world when it comes to
disenfranchising people convicted of felonies of their right to vote, and
states have widely divergent policies dictating whether someone can regain
their voting rights once released from prison..
In
recent years, however, there has been a push to ease these restrictions,
recognizing that many of them have roots in the Jim Crow south and were part of
an effort to disenfranchise African Americans after they gained the right to
vote.
All
of those efforts, however, have focused on making it easier to restore voting
rights after someone is released from prison; the DC measure is unique in that
it focuses on restoring voting rights while people are still incarcerated.
“The
movement to re-enfranchise people with felony convictions has largely stalled
at the prison gates,” Christopher Uggen, a professor at the University of
Minnesota who studies felon disenfranchisement, wrote in an email.
“In
recent years, many states have torn down post-sentence voting restrictions and
restrictions on people serving probation and parole sentences in the community.
Prisoners, however, have generally been excluded from these reforms.”
Maine
and Vermont are the only other states where those convicted of felonies are
permitted to vote in prison. Other states have taken starkly different
approaches. Prisoners in Utah lost the right to vote in 1998, as did
Massachusetts inmates in 2000.
If
approved by the Washington DC mayor, Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, the new law
would be in effect for 90 days, according to the Washington Post, though the
city, could approve a more permanent version this fall.




