North Carolina
Related: About this forumNorth Carolina Court Wipes Out Voting Restrictions Designed to "Secure White Supremacy"
North Carolina Court Wipes Out Voting Restrictions Designed to Secure White Supremacy
Tens of thousands of people are suddenly eligible to vote in November.
By MARK JOSEPH STERN
SEPT 08, 20205:35 PM
On Friday, a North Carolina court dramatically expanded the number of voters eligible to participate in the 2020 election. The state may not disenfranchise citizens who owe fines, fees, and other debts from a felony conviction, the Wake County Superior Court ruled on Friday. And while the court limited its order to those affected by wealth-based voter suppression, its reasoning portends a broader ruling in the near future that could restore voting rights to 70,000 more North Carolinians on probation or parole.
Many felon disenfranchisement rules, including North Carolinas, are rooted in overt white supremacy. After Reconstruction, racist Democrats in the state sought to revoke Black citizens suffrage. They accomplished this task, in part, through vague criminal laws that stripped convicted felons of their civil rightsthen enforced these laws disproportionately against Black people. North Carolinas current statute is rooted in an 1877 law spearheaded by a representative who later presided over the lynching of three Black men. At the time, Democrats argued that felon disenfranchisement was necessary to stop the honest vote of a white man from being off-set by the vote of some negro. Its purpose, alongside other Jim Crow measures like the literacy test, was to secure white supremacy.
The law continues to work as intended, as documented in an expert report by University of North Carolina professor Frank R. Baumgartner. Today, Black North Carolinians represent 22 percent of adults and 42 percent of the disenfranchised. Black residents are denied the right to vote at three times the rate of white residents in 44 counties. The states disenfranchisement regime targets two groups of people: those on probation or parole, and those whove completed their full sentence but still owe court debt. Notably, judges may extend an individuals probation or send them back to prison because they havent paid off these fines and fees.
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Put simply, the writing is on the wall: Bell and Gregory think North Carolinas felon disenfranchisement scheme is unconstitutional, but theyll reach that conclusion after a full trial, not at this preliminary stage, two months out from an election.
Link: https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/09/north-carolina-felon-disenfranchisement.html
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Thekaspervote
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(2,226 posts)Filled it out and am waiting for my wife to receive hers, then I will take them and drop them off at the County BOE, not using the mail, not using Early Voting although my daughter, her boyfriend and one of my sons are all doing the early Voting. Our other son is voting in person election day....Bottom Line up Front - the six of us are all voting the BLUE Wave!