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Showing Original Post only (View all)Virginia Governor Bypasses Court Ruling To Help 200,000 Ex-Felons Vote [View all]
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2016/07/23/3801355/virginia-felon-voting-update/Virginia Governor Bypasses Court Ruling To Help 200,000 Ex-Felons Vote
by Alice Ollstein
Jul 23, 2016 10:36 am
Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) is taking action to restore the voting rights of thousands of ex-offenders in the state after a court decision Friday put them in jeopardy. Hes getting around the Virginia Supreme Courts ruling against him by signing 200,000 individual clemency grants to the states ex-offenders to ensure their right to vote in November.
In a 4 to 3 decision late Friday, the Supreme Court of Virginia stripped away the voting rights from 200,000 ex-offenders who had recently regained full civil rights through one of McAuliffes executive orders, effectively disenfranchising one in five of the states African American voters.
The court said the governor lacks the authority under the state constitution to issue a blanket rights restoration to everyone in the state with a felony record who has already served their full sentence. A study earlier this year found that the vast majority of those impacted 80 percent committed non-violent crimes. Most have been out of prison for more than a decade, and African Americans are disproportionately represented. Forty-six percent of the ex-offenders are black, though blacks make up less than 20 percent of the states population.
The non-partisan group that has for months been leading the charge on registering ex-offenders to vote, New Virginia Majority, released a statement saying the ruling reaffirms the Commonwealths Jim Crow legacy, noting that the vast majority of states restore voting rights upon release from prison.
Excluding Virginians from the ballot, even after theyve paid their debts to society, is a cruel, inhumane reminder of past mistakes, said Tram Nguyen, the groups executive director. Importantly, todays ruling validates entrenched interests in the Virginia General Assembly bent on silencing a large swath of Black Virginians in order to maximize their political power.
But just hours after the decision, McAuliffe vowed to push back by signing clemency grants for the states ex-offenders one by one.
The struggle for civil rights has always been a long and difficult one, but the fight goes on, he wrote. I remain committed to moving past our Commonwealths history of injustice to embrace an honest process for restoring the rights of our citizens, and I believe history and the vast majority of Virginians are on our side.
more...
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2016/07/23/3801355/virginia-felon-voting-update/
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Virginia Governor Bypasses Court Ruling To Help 200,000 Ex-Felons Vote [View all]
babylonsister
Jul 2016
OP
And it'll be struck down again because the plain text of the constitution requires
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#1
Is there a provision in the constitution that he can act without the legislature if they are
MADem
Jul 2016
#2
So the insane guy should be voting, right along with the other felons currently
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#91
The correct way, since a partisan court interfered with him, is to sign each one and hand them out.
MADem
Jul 2016
#113
How is a practice that isn't based on race racist? And if their opinions are the same
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#118
Funny how my views are the same as the current VP pick's with regard to this issue
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#120
Really? Tim Kaine, the SCOVA and I have all said the governor doesn't have the
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#126
Where does it say the actions are not valid until presented? It doesn't.
Hassin Bin Sober
Jul 2016
#127
I don't have anything else to do....just waiting to change my sprinkler locations
Gabi Hayes
Jul 2016
#16
The only black and white that matters is what the plain text of what the constitution says
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#20
They had their rights revoked after getting due process. They aren't owed anything
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#81
I don't take marching orders from any party. You want your rights back, earn them
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#106
please cite legitimate and reliable sources, and name those individuals referenced in your post.
niyad
Jul 2016
#56
where did it go? unsupported assertions remind you of similar discussion tactics?
Gabi Hayes
Jul 2016
#58
oh dear, was it something I said? I know, it is so hard for some to understand that we
niyad
Jul 2016
#60
The constitution doesn't require the legislature to be in session for him to act
Major Nikon
Jul 2016
#5
If it's not presented to the legislature, it's not met the constitutional requirement
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#11
As said, the constitution doesn't say that and it's a pretty poor assumption
Major Nikon
Jul 2016
#21
Really? So you believe if the order of clemency is never presented it is still valid?
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#22
When he gets shot down again, and he will, maybe you'll understand the process
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#83
If it's so easy to understand, why can't you explain how Robin Lovitt is still alive?
Major Nikon
Jul 2016
#85
Using that logic, there is no need to report the clemency to the legislature
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#108
You've just argued the clemency was constitutionally valid at the time granted
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#116
So now you're back to arguing it was constitutionally valid when granted
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#122
So are you trying to say the state should have put him to death since his clemency wasn't valid yet?
Major Nikon
Jul 2016
#43
Too bad, for you, the WaPo found examples of people currently serving sentences in other states
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#84
Keep cheering for disenfranchisement--you do realize you are arguing the GOP position?
MADem
Jul 2016
#89
How do you disenfranchise people who lost their rights after due process?
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#92
So you'd be all for these new voters getting their right to own guns restored
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#97
You mean other than the fact the governor fulfilled his constitutional obligation?
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#93
I have. Repeatedly. Surely you're not going to make believe a state employee
Press Virginia
Jul 2016
#98
All he has to do is drop it in the mail to them, or have a courier bring it to the legislative head,
MADem
Jul 2016
#28
And this is Terry "Waaah DLC tool, blah blah blah corporate blah blah blah" McAuliffe, too.
MADem
Jul 2016
#35
I am so happy to hear that--I am glad he's doing good, and doing right by the citizens of the
MADem
Jul 2016
#55
I will never understand how felon disenfranchisement is even constitutional. nt
SunSeeker
Jul 2016
#30
What rational "cause" warrants taking away the most basic right of citizenship?
SunSeeker
Jul 2016
#50
The idea is that those who can't follow the law shouldn't be allowed to make it for others
Major Nikon
Jul 2016
#51
I started a thread on voter suppression being perhaps the most important issue
Gabi Hayes
Jul 2016
#57
unfortunately, the Supreme Court has refused to apply this analysis to felon disenfranchisement
JustinL
Jul 2016
#135
as did the SCOTUS decide that gore overreached in demanding that ALL votes be counted
Gabi Hayes
Jul 2016
#76
Both the state and federal Constitutions made it easier for the Executive...
Hassin Bin Sober
Jul 2016
#133
It's never made any sense to continue to punish criminals after they've paid their debt to
underahedgerow
Jul 2016
#88
In 1902, what was the INTENT of the VA constitutional convention that disfranchised 'felons'?
ProgressiveEconomist
Jul 2016
#140