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Virginia restores voting rights to over 200,000 convicts – The Cayman Position

_89400461_istock_000022380606_mediumBy Peter Polack

The difference between 10,000 Caymanians with a conviction and those in Northward is that Northward inmates cannot vote.

They are all convicts.

The Rehabilitation of Offenders Law and Conditional Release Law needs change for reasonable periods:

Fine- 1 year

Up to six months – 2 years

The law recognizes that it is impractical to keep a persons on conditions over 2 years: no suspended sentence can exceed 2 years.

No bail should exceed 2 years.

It is an assault that no human condition can withstand and inevitably leads to breach and hubris of the I Told You So’s who are setting up those not incarcerated or conditionally released.

The modern thought is that judges should not be bound by mandatory sentences as each case is unique on it’s facts and sometimes do not warrant extreme penalties.

Equally, the Director of Prisons who spends the most time with inmates is the person best qualified to approve exceptions to the minimum amount an inmate must serve for a certain class of non-violent inmates.

Give people a stake in society , to be engaged and participate in governance.

 

Virginia restores voting rights to over 200,000 convicts

_89400458_1d028bb8-7f7c-445b-b219-8be9e0d42756From BBC

The governor of the US state of Virginia has issued a sweeping executive order, restoring the right to vote to more than 200,000 convicts.

In the US, many states restrict the voting rights of people convicted of serious crimes upon their release.

Critics say the policies are unfair and disproportionately affect black men.

Governor Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, said the move was meant to help undo the state’s long history of trying to suppress the black vote.

Almost six million Americans cannot vote because they were convicted of a felony – typically a charge that carries a prison sentence of more than one year.

Activists said Governor McAuliffe’s order to restore voting rights is the largest of its kind in the US.

Many US states restrict the voting rights of people convicted of felonies

“Too often in both our distant and recent history, politicians have used their authority to restrict people’s ability to participate in our democracy,” Governor McAuliffe said.

Governor McAuliffe said he consulted with legal experts who determined that he had the authority to restore voting rights. However, his action is likely to be challenged by the Republican-led legislature.

Virginia is considered a swing state in the coming presidential election and the move to expand voting rights of people convicted of felonies could benefit Democrats.

Governor McAuliffe is also a close ally of Hillary Clinton, the likely Democratic nominee for president.

“The singular purpose of Terry McAuliffe’s governorship is to elect Hillary Clinton president of the United States,” Virginia House Speaker William J Howell said. “This office has always been a stepping stone to a job in Hillary Clinton’s cabinet.”

Under the order, those included will now also be able to run for public office, serve on a jury and become a notary public. To register to vote, they must not be in prison, on parole or on probation.

Laws restricting voting rights of people convicted of felonies vary across the US.

Three states – Florida, Iowa and Kentucky – bar people convicted of felonies from voting permanently. Meanwhile, two states – Vermont and Maine – have no restrictions on people convicted of felonies.

IMAGES:

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Governor McAuliffe Reuters

For more on this story go to: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-36116170

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