Black and Latinx people are disproportionately affected by disenfranchisement laws, which are still in effect in most U.S. states.
by Brett Wilkins, staff writer
Wednesday, October 14

Despite reforms in many states aimed at restoring ex-felons’ voting rights, an estimated 5.2 million Americans will remain disenfranchised and unable to vote in the 2020 elections, according to a study released Wednesday by The Sentencing Project.
Key findings from the study include:
- In 2020, an estimated 5.17 million people are disenfranchised due to a felony conviction, representing a 15% decline since 2016 due to states enacting measures to restore voting rights. There were an estimated 1.17 million people disenfranchised in 1976, 3.34 million in 1996, 5.85 million in 2010, and 6.11 million in 2016.
- One in 16 Black Americans of voting age is disenfranchised, a rate 3.7 times greater than that of non-Blacks. Over 6.2% of the adult Black population is disenfranchised, compared to 1.7% of the non-Black population.
- An estimated 560,000 Latinx Americans, or over 2% of the voting eligible population, are disenfranchised.
- Approximately 1.2 million women are disenfranchised, comprising over 20% of the total disenfranchised population.
The study found significant variations in disenfranchisement rates due to disparate state laws. In three states—Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee—more than 8% of the adult population, or one of every 13 people, has had their right to vote taken away.
BREAKING: 5.2 million Americans are barred from voting in the upcoming election due to a felony conviction. The criminal justice system shouldn’t decide who gets a say in our democracy! #LockedOut2020 #FreetheVote https://t.co/RdrFrB7I4G pic.twitter.com/q19EJq5Ej8
— Sentencing Project (@SentencingProj) October 14, 2020
Black disenfranchisement rates also vary considerably. In seven states—Alabama, Florida, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, Virginia, and Wyoming—more than one in seven Black Americans is barred from the ballot box, twice the national average.
Only two states, Maine and Vermont, allow currently incarcerated felons to vote. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) said last year that people behind bars “paying their price to society” should not be “denied their inherent American right to participate in our democracy.”
Sanders was widely rebuked, including by many U.S. liberals, for his assertion. However, other democracies around the world—including Canada, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Serbia, Slovenia, Spain, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, and Ukraine—allow convicted felons to vote, even while they are incarcerated.
The study noted a trend toward restoring former felons’ voting rights—over the past 25 years, half of the states have reformed their laws to expand ballot access to include people with felony convictions. However, setbacks in some states have reversed some of these gains.
Here are some resources for Voting for those who are Justice Impacted –
⁰NCSL https://t.co/jpQeufIL5F⁰⁰
State Felon Voting Laws – as of December 18, 2019⁰https://t.co/NaqYsNMUNK⁰⁰ACLU – Felony Disenfranchisement Laws (MAP) ⁰https://t.co/6cTJ9PXkmV— Women's Community Justice Association (@WomensCJA) October 6, 2020
In Florida, for example, nearly 900,000 people who have completed their sentences remain unable to vote despite the passage of a 2018 referendum that restored their voting rights. The following year, Republicans undermined this historic reform by passing a law—later upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court—requiring former felons to pay all their outstanding court fees in order to regain the right to vote.
“The bedrock of any democracy is the right to vote,” said Amy Fettig, executive director of The Sentencing Project, in a statement introducing the study. “Laws that exclude people from voting have destabilized communities and families in America for decades by denying them a voice in determining their futures. Voting is a vital responsibility of citizenship that must be encouraged and defended.”
This article published by Common Dreams on October 14, 2020, here…
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