Tennessee Adds to Process for Voting Rights After Felony Conviction

by Jon Styf

 

Tennessee has added new restrictions to allowing residents with out-of-state felony convictions to regain voting privileges.

Coordinator of Elections Mark Goins wrote a person convicted of a felony must receive a pardon from a governor of the United States president or have their full rights of citizenship restored and then must have paid all owed restitution and assessed court costs along with being current on child support obligations.

The memo, posted by Democracy Docket, comes after the Tennessee Supreme Court recently ruled a person convicted of a felony outside Tennessee must fulfill the state’s process for restoring voting rights.

“Although the Court indicated that the holding in Falls v. Goins was limited to the facts before them, the application of the holding to other governing statutes requires the same interpretation to those convicted of a felony in both federal and Tennessee state courts because the statutory language that applies to in-state and federal felonies closely aligns with the statutory language at issue in Falls v. Goins,” Goins wrote.

The person must submit evidence of the pardon or restoration of full rights of citizenship on a new Certificate of Restoration of Voting Rights form and have it approved before voting rights will be restored.

The Tennessee memo comes as Florida is being sued for allegedly creating a system that impedes the process of voting rights being restored five years after the state’s residents voting for the restoration of voting rights for those who have felony convictions.

It was estimated the Florida law would allow 1.4 million to regain voting rights, but that hasn’t happened, the Tampa Bay Times reports.

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Jon Styf is an award-winning editor and reporter of The Center Square who has worked in Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Florida and Michigan in local newsrooms over the past 20 years, working for Shaw Media, Hearst and several other companies.

 

 

 

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One Thought to “Tennessee Adds to Process for Voting Rights After Felony Conviction”

  1. levelheadedconservative

    I agree that a person who has served their time and paid their restitutions should be allowed to have their rights restored five years after their release. It should be incumbent upon the state to know if the requirements have been met, and they should be required to provide the information to the person upon request. If the judicial system is working, this info should be tracked anyway. How else would they know if they still owed fines or restitution?

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