Pubdate: Thu, 31 Jul 2003 Source: Press Journal (FL) Copyright: 2003, The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www1.tcpalm.com/tcp/press_journal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2977 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/states/fl/ (Florida) WRONG TO VOTE Restoring Felons' Rights Portends Political Shift In Florida, Nation. Hold onto your voter-registration card: Felons have opened another front in Florida's electoral battleground. A group of criminal-rights activists convinced a circuit judge in Tallahassee last week that 125,000 Florida felons hadn't received appropriate state assistance and advice to restore their civil rights - including the right to vote. Now, the Department of Corrections expects that 30,000 felons will regain those rights this year, with many more to follow. And make no mistake: That's good news for the Democratic Party, which lost the Florida presidential election and the White House by a mere 537 votes in 2000. Overall, 410,000 Floridians have been barred from voting because of their past felony convictions. Of that number, more than one-third are African-American. "Because African Americans vote Democratic 90 percent of the time, they could make a big difference in a close election," says Jim Kane, an independent pollster and publisher of Florida Voter in Fort Lauderdale. And that's not all. Other election watchers - noting that ex-cons, regardless of race, tend to favor Democrats - figure a half-dozen U.S. Senate races could hang in the balance across the country. The politically minded National Organization for the Advancement of Colored People knows this, and has made restoration of felons' voting rights a top priority. In doing so, the NAACP and its running mates at the American Civil Liberties Union are unabashedly playing the race card, likening Florida law to the Jim-Crow era. Florida is one of six states that deny ex-felons the right to vote unless they take steps to have their civil rights restored. Their petitions are decided on a case-by-case basis and, so far, Gov. Jeb Bush opposes a "carte-blanche" restoration of voting rights. But last week's court decision, which ensures state assistance in the petition process, could provide the wedge that pries open the ballot box to more murderers, rapists and other assorted merchants of mayhem. Felon-rights groups are becoming more vocal here and nationally. One Web site, (VotingExCons.com), calls for, among other things, hiring preferences for "qualified" ex-felons and an end to the "drug-war hoax." Meantime, Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., has introduced legislation to sweep away the state laws and grant felon voting rights across America. His bill would cover 4 million U.S. felons who have "paid their debt to society." In a not-so-thinly veiled threat, Randy Berg of the Florida Justice Institute declared, "If you don't restore their civil rights, they will go back to a life of crime." Could this be what the founders had in mind when they penned the Bill of Rights and created the world's greatest representative democracy? At this rate, the 2004 election will be most interesting indeed. - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder