Virginia restores voting rights to felons, barred from ballot box since civil war
Governor Terry McAuliffe says restoring the vote to convicted felons
who have served their time would overturn the states history of
suppressing the black vote
Sabrina Siddiqui in Washington
Friday 22 April 2016 18.51 BST
Governor Terry McAuliffe of Virginia has paved the way for more than 200,000 convicted felons to be eligible to vote with a historic executive order announced on Friday.
McAuliffe, a Democrat, declared a day for celebration in remarks outside the state Capitol. The action, he said, would help overturn a history of suppressing the black vote in Virginia, where felons have been barred from voting since the civil war.
With this action, we will send a message to these 206,000 individuals and to the world that Virginia will no longer build barriers to the ballot box, we will break them down, McAuliffe said, adding that individuals who have completed their sentences would no longer be treated as second-class citizens.
Civil rights, particular the right to vote, had been a centerpiece of McAuliffes 2013 gubernatorial campaign. Since assuming office in 2014, the governor has taken steps to restore voting rights to 18,000 Virginians. Under McAuliffes new order, felons convicted of both violent and non-violent crimes will be able to vote so long as they have carried out their sentences.
Although there has been some bipartisan consensus on criminal justice reform, voting rights has remained a wedge issue among both political parties. And with Virginia as a key battleground in the 2016 election, the politicization of McAuliffes action was immediately apparent.
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