Alabama
Related: About this forumClinics Planned to Help Felons Register to Vote
A new state law restores voting rights for many people with felony convictions, and two legal groups will be holding clinics this summer to make sure those people are registered to vote.
The ACLU of Alabama and Legal Services of Alabama both plan to hold a series of restoration clinics at churches in Birmingham, Mobile and Selma this summer.
Last month, state lawmakers approved a law clarifying that there are only certain types of felonies, like murder and drug trafficking, that would cause someone to lose their right to vote. The previous definition was a crime of moral turpitude, which was up to interpretation.
The first restoration clinic will be held July 8 at Brown Chapel A.M.E. in Selma to train volunteer lawyers and those potentially affected about the new law. ?
http://apr.org/post/clinics-planned-help-felons-register-vote
Doreen
(11,686 posts)The state wants to punish women for taking birth control pills, keep them from getting breast cancer screening to keep them from dying, not care for the children they force the women to have, and take health care from everyone except the rich THEN let felons vote to make crime legal. If anyone will vote for crimes to be more lenient or not a crime at all it would be felons who do not want to get into trouble again or get their buddies out of prison. I see very bad things happening with this.
WinkyDink
(51,311 posts)mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)The issue of whether women have the rights they're due, and the issue of whether 'felons' (or at least some subset of them) have paid their debt to society and should hence be allowed to vote ... are pretty much completely unrelated
Seems like a bit of a 'conflation fail', if I'm honest. A non-sequitur, if you will
Again, no offense, as maybe I'm 'missing something' ... having an XY chromosome configuration can make me stupid sometimes ...
Or are you under the impression that 'the public' does a lot of 'voting' on 'whether or not X is a crime', and that hence a HUGE population of 'felons' exercising 'voting rights' ... could really impact that vote, and, they'd like, exonerate themselves and their buddies'?
Cause .. I don't really think that happens ... like, EVER.
secondwind
(16,903 posts)Mike B
(19 posts)....100%.
TxDemChem
(1,918 posts)mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)I've always seen these rules as a way to keep the GOP in power, myself.
You pay your debt to society, esp. if you're also done with parole?
You should have your franchise back ... PERIOD.
I don't care WHAT you did.