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Read our current and previous coverage of the 2018 election season as you prepare to cast your ballot. You'll find information on important races, explanations of constitutional amendments and details of local referendums.

Critic Of Voting Restoration Initiative Says Amendment 4 Pits Felons Against Each Other

Voters cast their ballots.
Sascha Cordner
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WFSU-FM
Voters cast their ballots.

Florida is one of only a few states that doesn’t automatically restore voting rights to felons who’ve completed their sentences. The fight goes back years and it's been waged both in court and in the court of public opinion. Now, voters themselves have the chance to weigh in with Amendment 4. It  would automatically restore rights to most felons. But there are exceptions that’s created a divide inside the main group pushing hardest for the change.

Voters cast their ballots.
Credit Sascha Cordner / WFSU-FM
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WFSU-FM
Voters cast their ballots.

When Florida Governor Rick Scott took office eight years ago, he and the rest of the cabinet stopped  a policy that streamlined the restoration process of voting rights to felons. In the years since, only about 3,000 of those people have had their rights restored. The rest, well...

“I think all of us would rather help you, but this record…it’s awfully difficult to say whether you changed your life. It doesn’t look like it," Scott told Jemel Jerome Filler back in September during the last meeting of the state clemency board. 

Filler is a school teacher and habitual traffic offender which led to his felony conviction.  He didn’t get his rights restored. And he’s among an estimated 1.5 million Floridians in the same predicament.

The state has been sued over its rights restoration policy, and earlier this year a federal court determined the system is unconstitutional. Felons have to wait five years before they can apply to the state’s clemency board which decides whether to restore or reject their petitions. That board is made up of the Governor (Rick Scott) Attorney General (Pam Bondi)  Agriculture Commissioner (Adam Putnam) and Chief Financial Officer (Jimmy Patronis).

Amendment 4 on the upcoming ballot would take away most of the clemency board’s power over that process—automatically restoring rights to most of the people who’ve completed their sentences. Most, but not all.

“If you look at the history of voting rights in this country, no one has ever saught to extend the franchise at the expense of someone else," says Prison Legal News founder Paul Wright. He too is a felon, having served more than 20 years in prison for a murder conviction. 

“Martin Luther King didn’t say ‘well, let’s just have some black people vote, but not dark skinned black people'…likewise, when we had the struggle for women’s sufferage, no one got left behind on that. And more recently, we have the movement for marriage equality.”

Wright argues excluding murders and sex offenders pits felons against each other and perpetuates stereotypes.

“What on Earth does having been convicted of murder 31 years ago have to do with whether or not I can vote? I’m actually more concerned about government officials that are corrupt…and betray the trust of taxpayers…maybe people convicted of voting fraud. But all those people under Amendment 4, get their voting rights back.”   

Still, the exclusion of people convicted of murder and sex offenses is popular notion, and also championed by candidates running for statewide positions.

Amendment 4 has been heavily supported by the American Civil Liberties Union and the group that led the citizen drive to get it onto the ballot, Floridians for a Fair Democracy. The campaign has raised and spent millions of dollars on the effort, and still has a few million in the bank ahead of Election Day. According to polls, Amendment 4 is also one of the few voters are likely to approve next month. 

Copyright 2020 WFSU. To see more, visit WFSU.

Lynn Hatter is a Florida A&M University graduate with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. Lynn has served as reporter/producer for WFSU since 2007 with education and health care issues as her key coverage areas. She is an award-winning member of the Capital Press Corps and has participated in the NPR Kaiser Health News Reporting Partnership and NPR Education Initiative. When she’s not working, Lynn spends her time watching sci-fi and action movies, writing her own books, going on long walks through the woods, traveling and exploring antique stores. Follow Lynn Hatter on Twitter: @HatterLynn.
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