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Was the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen? Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the Official Count by Steven F. Freeman & Joel Bleifuss / Foreword by U.S. Representative John Conyers, Jr.

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Felon disenfranchisement
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Felon disenfranchisement

by Steven Freeman 10/9/2008 10:23:00 AM

As a senior researcher for Sourcewatch's  Election Protection Wiki, I am writing many "issues articles," some of which I will periodically blog here. Please feel free to go to the Sourcewatch article to comment or edit this or other articles, as well as to comment here.

 

Felon disenfranchisement

In 2004, 5.3 million Americans are denied the right to vote because of laws that prohibit voting by people with felony convictions.[1] In all but two states (Maine & Vermont), felons are deprived of voting rights while serving their sentence. In ten states, felons are deprived of voting rights for life. [2] In the remaining 34 states, felons' voting rights are restored at some point after their sentence has been completed.

US exceptionalism

Although some countries deny voting rights to prison inmates, the United States is unique in restricting the rights of nonincarcerated former felons.[3] In Finland and New Zealand felons are restricted to vote for several years after their release from prison, but only if the offender was convicted of voting-related crimes or political corruption, and even then it is restored after that. [4]

    US incarceration rates

The United States is also exceptional for the rate at which it issues felony convictions. Felon disenfranchisement has increased dramatically as sentencing rates have surged. The United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world; 1 out of every 100 Americans are in prison [5], compared with 1 out of every 1,000 Canadians and less than .5 of every 1,000 Japanese. [6]

    Extent of disenfranchisement

Loss of voting rights often occurs even without incarceration. In Florida, an offender who receives probation who receives probation for a single marijuana sale faces a lifetime of disenfranchisement. [7] All told, in 2000, Florida legally deprived more than 827,200 citizens who had been convicted of felonies of the right to vote. This represented more than 7% of the Florida voting-age population. And that figure happens to include 31% of the state’s voting-age African-American males. [8]

Racial discrimination

Loss of voting privileges in Florida is not simply a collateral consequence of a felony conviction. Denial of voting privilege has been used historically as a means to suppress black political power. Most states first adopted a felon disenfranchisement statute during Reconstruction when the Fifteenth Amendment and its extension of voting rights to African-Americans were ardently contested.[9]

Racial motivations were openly admitted throughout the South. At the 1901 Alabama Constitutional Convention, John B. Knox, president of this gathering, warned the assembled white people of “the menace of negro domination.” As a remedy, he advocated “manipulation of the ballot” by expanding the state’s disenfranchisement law to include crimes of “moral turpitude,” crimes that included misdemeanors, and even actions that were not punishable by law. [10] And in 1916, the Mississippi Supreme Court upheld the state’s felon disenfranchisement law and ruled, “Restrained by the federal constitution from discriminating against the negro race, the convention discriminated against its characteristics and the offenses to which its criminal members are prone.” [11]

Impact on US elections

The impact has been decisive in important elections. In 2000, Bush won the presidency because he prevailed in Florida by only 537 votes. But sociologists Christopher Uggen and Jeff Manza estimated that 155,000 of the state's disenfranchised felons would have voted for Gore in 2000 and 70,000 would have voted for Bush, resulting in 85,000 net votes -- and a decisive victory -- for Gore.[12]

Because of increasing incaraceration rates, the impact of felon disenfranchisement has been increasing. Uggen and Manza calculate that if former felons had been disenfranchised in 1960 at 2000 rates, John F. Kennedy’s 119,000-popular-vote victory margin in the 1960 presidential election would have disintegrated, and Richard Nixon would have won with a plurality of more than 100,000 votes. [13]


    Illicit Impact on US elections

States have also used felon-disenfranchisment laws as pretext for voter (registration) roll purges that also disenfranchise non-felons. A particularly notorious and conqequential example of faux felon disenfranchisement was the Florida 2000 Database Technologies (DBT) purge of 82,389 mostly African-American, more than 90% of whom should have been eligible to vote. DBT received a no-bid $4 million contract, up from $5,000 for the previous contractor to expand -- and not verify! -- the list. When a DBT employee told Harris's office there were too many names that did not belong, she said she wanted more, i.e., to lower the "match criterion" percentage from c. 90% to c. 80%. [14]

More than half those wrongly purged were African-Americans, even though African-Americans represent only about 11% of the electorate. In contrast, the purge list contained almost no Hispanics, notwithstanding Florida’s sizable Hispanic population. Because in Florida Hispanics vote mostly Republican and African Americans vote overwhelmingly Democratic, this illicit purge, which had been justified by ex-felon disenfranchisement laws, tipped Florida, and thereby the US Presidency the from Gore to Bush. [14]

Articles and resources

   Related SourceWatch articles

   References

  1. Christopher Uggen and Jeff Manza, Locked Out: Felon Disenfranchisement and American Democracy (2006, Oxford University Press)
  2. Fellner and Mauer, “Losing the Vote,” p. 8. Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, Virginia, and Wyoming. Arizona and Maryland disenfranchise permanently those convicted of a second felony; Tennessee and Washington disenfranchise permanently those convicted prior to 1986 and 1984, respectively. In addition, in Texas a convicted felon’s right to vote is not restored until two years after discharge from prison, probation or parole.
  3. Research by Penal Reform International may be obtained from CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants) in Washington, D.C. Also on file at Human Rights Watch. In Germany the law calls on prisons to encourage prisoners to vote.
  4. The American Series of Foreign Penal Code: Federal Republic of Germany, Title I, § 45 (5). A judge may bar a convicted offender from voting only if the offense is punishable by more than one year of imprisonment and if the crime falls within enumerated sections of the Penal Code covering such crimes as treason, electoral fraud, espionage, membership in an illegal organization.
  5. Adam Lifak 1 in 100 U.S. Adults Behind Bars, New Study Says NY Times, February 28, 2008
  6. Roy Walmsley, World Prison Population List, No. 116, Research Findings, 3d ed. (London, England: Home Office Research, Development and Statistics Directorate, 2002).
  7. Uggen and Manza, “Democratic Contraction? Political Consequences of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, American Sociological Review, 2002, Vol. 67 (December: 777–803), 778 (column 2). They cite Mauer 1997a; U.S. Department of Justice 2002; Walmsley 2002.
  8. Steven F. Freeman and Joel Bleifuss, Was the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen? Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the Official Count, (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2006) Chapter 2. Florida sets the stage.
  9. Angela Behrens, Christopher Uggen, and Jeff Manza, “Ballot Manipulation and the ‘Menace of Negro Domination’: Racial Threat and Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 1850–2002,” AJS 109, no. 3 (November 2003): 559–605.
  10. “Journal of the Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Alabama” (Montgomery, Ala.: Brown Printing Co., 1901), 12. Cited in Behrens, Uggen, and Manza, “Ballot Manipulation,” 571.
  11. The Free Press, 74 Miss. 266–67, Supreme Court of Mississippi, 1896. Cited in Behrens, Uggen, and Manza, “Ballot Manipulation,” 569.
  12. Christopher Uggen and Jeff Manza, “Democratic Contraction? Political Consequences of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States American” Sociological Review, 2002, Vol. 67 (December: 777–803). The estimates are based on felon voting rates in other states and the voting behavior of Floridians matching felons in terms of gender, race, age, income, labor-force status, marital status, and education.
  13. Christopher Uggen and Jeff Manza, “Democratic Contraction? Political Consequences of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States American” Sociological Review, 2002, Vol. 67 (December: 777–803)
  14. Greg Palast, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy (London: Pluto Press, 2002), 44–47. DBT was subsequently merged into ChoicePoint Corporation.

   External resources

Books

Websites

  • The sentencing project mission is to remove barriers to voting by people with felony convictions. Working with state and local partners, the Campaign is engaged in policy reform, litigation, public education, and voter registration both nationally and in targeted states.

Articles

  • Angela Behrens, Christopher Uggen, and Jeff Manza, “Ballot Manipulation and the ‘Menace of Negro Domination’: Racial Threat and Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 1850–2002,” AJS 109, no. 3 (November 2003): 559–605.
  • Jamie Fellner and Marc Mauer, “Losing the Vote: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United States” (Washington, D.C.: Human Rights Watch and The Sentencing Project, 1998) * Christopher Uggen & Jeff Manza. 2004. “Voting and Subsequent Crime and Arrest: Evidence from a Community Sample.” 'Columbia Human Rights Law Review'
  • Christopher Uggen and Jeff Manza, “Democratic Contraction? Political Consequences of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States American” Sociological Review, 2002, Vol. 67 (December: 777–803)

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Comments

10/26/2008 12:11:49 PM

Michael Carmichael

Election Integrity provides a platform for transparent voting and tabulation -- prerequisites of democracy. The United States falls far short of global standards for democracy, voting rights and election integrity. Clearly, Election Integrity can help foster higher standards in US elections. Planetary/USA supports democratic reform in America, and we commend the work and mission of Election Integrity. Please, feel free to visit our website: www.planetarymovement.org

The presidential election of 2008 is the most important of many important elections in my lifetime. Unfortunately, it now appears as if there is a concerted effort to deny the vote to hundreds of thousands of voters in battleground states. Election Integrity has a crucial role to play in the future of democracy in the USA.


Michael Carmichael us

5/30/2009 1:37:36 AM

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It's hard to believe how inconsiderate and how biased these laws are. I do want to acknowledge one thing about NY state. in New York a person convicted of a felony but no prison time is still elligible to vote. Even if the person was convicted of local jail time plus probation. a state prision sentence changes the rule.

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6/26/2009 12:55:34 PM

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I agree with poster dvd duplication. The laws do seem pretty biased.

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12/1/2009 7:44:14 PM

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