U.S. Compliance with U.N. Recommendations Critical to Restoring Vote to
Millions
The United Nations Human Rights Committee has charged that U.S.
disenfranchisement policies are discriminatory and violate international
law. Concluding Observations
(http://www.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrc/docs/AdvanceDocs/
CCPR.C.USA.CO.pdf)
(Recommendation 35) released on Friday, July 28 by the Committee call for the
restoration of voting rights to people released from prison and raise concerns
that the widespread practice of denying voting rights to people with felony
convictions disproportionately impacts the rights of minority groups and are
counterproductive to efforts to reintegrate those re-entering society after
prison.
The U.S. "should adopt appropriate measures to ensure that states restore
voting rights to citizens who have fully served their sentences and those who
have been released on parole" said the Human Rights Committee in their
recommendations.
If the U.N. recommendations are implemented, 36 states would change their
laws and nearly four million Americans would have their voting rights restored.
Internationally, adopting the U.N. recommendations would bring the U.S. in line
with the voting rights standards of nations such as Switzerland, Austria, and
Ireland whose laws already allow for post-prison restoration of voting
rights.
The recommendations follow hearings held on July 17 and 18, 2006 in Geneva,
Switzerland where U.S. compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR) was assessed. Voting rights emerged as an issue area of
particular concern for committee members.
The ICCPR covers a wide range of issues, but of the 25 specific written
questions that the Committee, in March 2006, asked the U.S. to answer, after
reviewing the October 2005 U.S. report on its treaty compliance, one was "Please
provide more details on the rules governing the removal and restoration of
the right to vote for those convicted of criminal offenses, and explain to what
extent they comply with article 25 of the covenant [right to political
participation]?" At the July 2006 oral examination of the U.S. delegation,
composed of high-level representatives from the U.S. State Department, the
Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon, the
ACLU, on behalf of itself and other U.S. organizations, made an oral
presentation to the Committee on voting rights, focusing on felony
disfranchisement policies. The ACLU also reported on the issue in its
“Shadow Report” to this Committee, a report that examines U.S. violations of
human rights protected under the ICCPR, Dimming the Beacon of Freedom U.S.
Violations of the International Covenant on Civil & Political Rights,
available at: http://www.aclu.org/intlhumanrights/gen/25937res20060620.html
The New York Times, in a July 31, 2006 editorial about the Human rights
Committee’s report, wrote: “The hearings…dealt with how the United States
treats its prison inmates, particularly the disenfranchisement laws that bar
more than 5 million convicted felons from the polls. The American
representative weakly defended the practice’s legality, but dodged explaining
its rationale, saying the rules come from the states, not the federal
government….the committee said that blanket disenfranchisement was inconsistent
with the covenant and served no rehabilitative purpose. Noting that
disenfranchisement disproportionately affects minorities, the report urged the
United States to restore voting rights to citizens who have served their
sentences or who are released on parole. The report is not legally
binding. But it reminds us how poorly we treat ex-offenders compared with
democracies abroad.” To obtain the full editorial from the archives of the
New York Times, go to http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F50B16F8385B0C728FDDAE0894DE404482.