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In 2010, 300,000 Disfranchised Voters is Unacceptable

Kent Willis,
ACLU of Virginia
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January 5, 2010

(Originally posted on Daily Kos.)

It's a new year and many of us are thinking about new beginnings, resolving to be more involved in our communities, and re-committing to doing right by our neighbors. And today, a group of organizations in Virginia is to embody this New Year's spirit by ending the state's excessively harsh voter disfranchisement policy.

Right now in Virginia, approximately 300,000 people with past felony convictions who have finished their sentences — meaning they are not in prison and are not on probation or parole — are barred from voting for life because they have past felony convictions. Only one other state (Kentucky) has such a punitive disfranchisement policy; all other states have apparently realized that barring so many people from voting is just plain un-American.

Among these 300,000 disfranchised Virginians are people like Frank Anderson, whose story was . Anderson volunteered for Gov. Kaine's gubernatorial campaign, but when he applied for the restoration of his voting rights, his application was denied because he had several speeding tickets. You see, to get your voting rights back in Virginia, you have to submit an individual application to the governor and can have "no convictions for violations of the law." Apparently, "this includes moving violations, such as speeding." If we kept everyone with a speeding ticket from voting, our voting booths would be perpetually empty.

Virginia's disfranchisement law is a . At the 1901-02 Virginia Constitutional Convention (where felony disfranchisement laws were debated), one delegate explained: "This plan will eliminate the darkey as a political factor in this State in less than 5 years, so that in no single county…will there be the least concern felt for the complete supremacy of the white race in the affairs of government."

The remnants of this racially-biased policy are . While 6.8 percent of Virginia's voting age population as a whole is disfranchised, 19.8 percent of the state's African-American voting age population — approximately 200,000 individuals — is barred from voting.

As we enter this new decade, do we seriously believe that policies like these make us the land of the free and home of the brave?

During his last weeks in office, Gov. Kaine can and should join the ranks of and by using his executive power to expand democracy. With the stroke of a pen, he can restore voting rights to all Virginians who have finished their sentences, and can put in place a process for automatically restoring rights to others who complete their sentences in the future.

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