Felony Voting Rights Restoration in Tennessee

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At a Glance

In Tennessee, the law regarding which people with past criminal convictions can and cannot vote has been confusing. Based on the most recent estimates, Tennessee’s law disenfranchises over 470,000 people in the state, but the good news is that many of those people can get their right to vote back.

Campaign Legal Center is working in Tennessee to assist people with convictions through the rights restoration process, train community leaders on that process and break down the notion that a felony conviction always means that you cannot vote for life.

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The Latest

Gicola Lane, Restore Your Vote advocate at Campaign Legal Center (CLC) and Dawn Herrington, executive director of Free Hearts, recently published an op-ed in The Tennessean highlighting how Pamela Moses’ sentence of six years in prison for trying to regain the freedom to vote underscores the need to reform Tennessee’s rights restoration process.

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About this Action

In Tennessee, the law regarding which people with past criminal convictions can and cannot vote has been confusing. Whether a person can vote depends on the year of their conviction, what they were convicted of, whether they are able to pay their legal debt, and whether they have completed their sentence(s). Moreover, some people (but not all) who are eligible to get their right to vote back after a conviction are required to file a request to restore their right – a process that many do not know about. As a result, many Tennesseans with past convictions who are or could be eligible to vote simply do not know that they can participate.

Based on the most recent estimates Tennessee’s law disenfranchises over 470,000 people in the state. The law denies the right to vote to 8.2% of the entire state-wide voting-age population, including more than 21% of the adult black voting-age population. The good news is that for many people with convictions, their voting rights can be restored. Depending on the year of their conviction, some never lost their right to vote at all, though they may believe otherwise.

Campaign Legal Center is working in Tennessee to assist people with convictions through the rights restoration process, train community leaders on that process and break down the notion that a felony conviction always means that you cannot vote for life. Through assisting hundreds of Tennesseans, we plan to iron out the rights restoration process to make it easier for individuals to navigate on their own. We will also identify and push back on systemic barriers that are making it harder for people with convictions to vote.

Learn more about our voting rights work in Tennessee:

 

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