Media Advisory
February 3, 2005
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Contact: MATT
KOVARY
(212) 382-6713 |
Voting Rights Act Protects
Felons’ Right to Vote, NYC
Bar Association Argues
The New York City Bar Association, through its
Committees on Civil Rights and Corrections, has
submitted an amicus brief arguing that the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 prohibits all forms of racially
discriminatory voter disenfranchisement; and that
crucial protections in the Act can and should be
applied to state statutes that disenfranchise incarcerated
felons when the statute results in denial of the
right to vote on account of race.
The Bar Association filed the brief at the invitation
of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. On December
29, 2004, the court granted a rehearing before
the full court in a case concerning whether citizens
are being denied their right to vote on account
of their race because of racial discrimination
inherent in the state’s criminal justice
system. New York State, with a prison population
that is overwhelmingly black and Hispanic, does
not allow incarcerated or paroled felons to vote.
The question before the Court is whether Section
2 of the federal Voting Rights Act can be applied
to felon disenfranchisement laws. The Association
argues that felon disenfranchisement statutes are
covered by the Voting Rights Act and that Section
2 of the Act is a justifiable exercise of Congress’s
enforcement powers under the Fifteenth Amendment.
“Fundamentally, Congress’s intent
in enacting the Voting Rights Act was to eradicate
racially discriminatory voter disenfranchisement,
no matter what its cause. To hold that Congress
intended to exempt felon disenfranchisement statutes
from that law is to hold that Congress actually
intended to permit certain forms of racially discriminatory
voter disenfranchisement. That plainly was not
Congress’s intent,” says the brief.
The Voting Rights Act -- first enacted in 1965
at a time when black citizens were being denied
their right to vote, particularly by states in
the South -- helped restore voting privileges for
blacks and overrode discrimination and voting restrictions
previously enforced on a state-by-state basis.
For example, in Mississippi, only five percent
of eligible blacks were registered to vote in the
1960 election. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 supported
the 15 th Amendment’s permanent guarantee
that no person would be denied the right to vote
on account of race or color.
“The Association considers
the right to vote to be a fundamental right of
citizenship. As lawyers,” says the City Bar
Association, “we believe that universal suffrage
is the cornerstone of the rule of law and of our
participatory democracy. Accordingly, the Association
is concerned about any mechanisms that impede full
political participation or diminish the minority
vote, countering decades of voting rights gains.”
Addressing the demographic disparity between the
state’s voting population and its prison
population, the Bar notes that, “There is
a vast body of evidence showing that African-Americans
and Latinos are arrested more often, convicted
more often and given harsher sentences than members
of other racial groups who commit the same types
of crimes. Because New York does not allow incarcerated
or paroled felons to vote, that evidence would
show that people are being denied the right to
vote on account of their race, in violation of
the Voting Rights Act.”
Furthermore, national electoral events in the
past decade suggest that felon disenfranchisement
statutes such as New York’s may in fact change
the outcomes of national elections, and may have
altered the outcomes of seven recent Senate elections
and at least one presidential election. “In
light of the 2000 presidential election, which
was determined by a margin of 537 votes in Florida,
and research indicating that hundreds of thousands
of persons in Florida were disenfranchised due
to a prior felony conviction, the Association is
more concerned than ever that N.Y. Elec. Law § 5-106
(McKinney 2004) poses a serious challenge to the
legitimacy of our elections.”
Please contact Matt
Kovary , Association press coordinator,
for a copy of this well-documented civil rights
report. He may be reached at (212) 382-6713,
or at mkovary@nycbar.org.
About the Association
Founded in 1870, the Association
is a professional association of more than 22,000
attorneys. Through its many standing committees,
including those on Civil Rights and Corrections,
the Association educates the bar and the public
about legal issues relating to civil rights, including
voting rights, incarceration and its alternatives,
and the nature of Congressional power to enact
remedial legislation to curb discriminatory state
action. By the contributions of these committees,
the Association also seeks to promote racial equality
under law, including the equal treatment of people
of color in our state’s criminal justice
system.
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