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Fighting for Voting Rights for All AmericansToday marks the second day of a two-day United Nations forum on "minorities and effective political participation." Chaired by Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), the forum has attracted legislators, academics and members of the nongovernmental organization community from around the world to Geneva to address the continuing problems faced by minority communities engaging in the political process. Although the U.S. holds itself out as a model democratic society, the benefit of democracy continues to elude millions of Americans. The U.S. has repeatedly failed to protect the voting rights of minority communities, and has turned a blind eye to state actions that make it more difficult for minority citizens to participate in the political process. The ways in which people of color are systematically kept from the ballot box in the United States are many and varied. The ACLU submission to be presented at the forum focuses on two populations whose voting rights the U.S. government has consistently and repeatedly failed to protect: Native peoples and those with criminal records, a disproportionate number of whom are people of color. Though on its face race-neutral, felony disfranchisement – the set of policies and practices that bar 5.3 million Americans with criminal records from the ballot box – has a particularly devastating impact on minority individuals and communities. Across the country, 8.25 percent of the African-American voting-age population is barred from voting due to felony disfranchisement laws, compared to only 2.42 percent of the general voting age population. In states with the greatest levels of African-American disfranchisement, those rates rise to more than 20 percent. If incarceration rates hold steady, three in 10 of the next generation of black men can expect to be disfranchised at some point in their lives. Indeed, the origins of felony disfranchisement lie in explicit efforts to keep African-Americans from the ballot box. After passage of the 15th Amendment in 1870, southern states began to tailor their felony disfranchisement laws to target African-Americans. For example, Mississippi revised its constitution to impose disfranchisement as a penalty specifically for crimes of which black people were most frequently convicted. In 1902 at the Virginia Constitutional Convention, felony disfranchisement laws were introduced with the stated intent to "eliminate the darkey as a political factor in this State." These laws remain in effect today. Though the movement for equal rights has led to dramatic gains for Indian voters and transformed elected bodies that serve Indian communities, Indians continue to struggle against ongoing disfranchisement and discriminatory election practices that prevent them from participating equally in the political process. The recent ACLU report Voting Rights in Indian Country, which accompanied our U.N. submission, outlines current obstacles to Indian voting, including electoral systems that dilute Indian voting strength; discriminatory voter registration procedures; onerous voter identification requirements; lack of language assistance at the polls; noncompliance with the Voting Rights Act and the historic refusal of our government to recognize Indians as U.S. citizens. Human rights standards protecting the right to vote, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, are robust because the right to vote is fundamental in every way. And yet the United States continues to fail to protect the voting rights of minority communities, in violation of the United States' commitments under international treaties that enshrine the right to vote. The Obama administration has committed itself to enforcing the Voting Rights Act, which is a good step toward protecting the fundamental right to vote. But as our submission to the U.N. demonstrates, much remains to be done to protect this right for all Americans.
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Nov 14th, 2009 at 8:03am
By your logic, Al Capone and John Gotti would have had a voice in choosing our president. Your campaign to give felons voting rights borders on treason.
jcgiglio@att.net
Nov 14th, 2009 at 4:21pm
Actualy your logic Jimmy is about the same as that used in the old U.S.S.R.
Any discent was called treason and was punished as such.
Nov 18th, 2009 at 8:18am
Voting rights of minority communities?!?! Are you kidding me? Whites, blacks, yellows, purples men and women ALL have the right to vote in our country! Discrimination in the US is by the colored people. Ever hear of the United White College Fund, All White Rodeo??
Nov 25th, 2009 at 8:09am
Actually...the 14th amendment is being taken out of context. It says the right of the vote may be denied for rebellion or "other crime". If the powers that be were to enforce it word for word...... misdemeanors would not be allowed to vote either because misdemeanors are crimes as well as felonies!If any of u have access to case law...take a peek at Gatewood v. Culbreath 47 So. 2d 725. This case defines the term "other crime" which is the reasoning for the denial of the vote.
Nov 25th, 2009 at 8:44am
Its not based on if they can restrict someones right to vote...we already know they can...but can they do it legally and equally.
For instance...the term "other crime" contained in the 2nd clause of the 14th amendment, is the reasoning for the denial of the vote to felons and a clear cut definition of the term "other crime" is given by the Supreme Court which includes misdemeanor as well as treason and felony.
It only stands to reason that people convicted of misdemeanor offenses as well as those convicted of felony offenses should not be able to vote...after all...the law is the law.
Nov 25th, 2009 at 5:10pm
Anyone who is sucking off the tax payer should NOT have the right to vote! I do not appreciate the indigent voting for those who will line their pockets with more of my money in the form of entitlements. I have worked hard for my money since my 15th birthday. I don’t mind helping the handicapped or elderly but I’ve lived among those on welfare…paying full rent and working my butt off while the welfare moms were sitting at home with acrylic nails and cell phones; living illegally with their “baby daddy.” My father always said, “You don’t appreciate what you don’t earn.”
Nov 29th, 2009 at 12:36am
If you follow the rules of the United States and stay out of prison then anyone can vote.
Nov 30th, 2009 at 9:55pm
This is the first time I have visited this website, The ACLU is a misguided disgraceful organization clearly intent on promoting anarchy within our Country. Thank God 98% of the responses I see posted here give me hope that our Country will survive despite your attempts to destroy it.
Dec 29th, 2009 at 6:08pm
Consider a World Union Constitution making the declaration of human rights part of an official world Union Constitution with intercontinental voting rights.