Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

Did Republican Felon Disenfranchisement Deliver Florida for Trump?

In 2018, Florida voters restored voting rights to over 1.4 million formerly incarcerated people. Because of a Republican-backed bill passed in 2019, however, very few of these people were actually able to vote in the 2020 election. With a close race in Florida, did this tip the scales in Trump’s favor?

Zed Simon

November 5, 2020
Facebook Twitter Share

Florida was again positioned as a swing state in the 2020 election —  the “toss-up” with the most Electoral College votes, to boot. At 29 electors, it’s tied with New York as the third-largest prize (behind California and Texas) in the fabled road to 270 and the presidency. This year, just as in 2016, Florida was called for Trump, by a margin of about 375,000 votes as of this writing. 

The outcome could have been much different. 

Back in 2018, Florida voters restored voting rights to most former felons, re-enfranchising an estimated 1.4 million people through an amendment to the state constitution. Not content to simply allow people to exercise their right to vote, in 2019 Republicans passed a bill requiring these newly enfranchised voters to pay any remaining court and prison fines and fees before they could legally vote. It was signed by Republican governor Ron DeSantis. The law has since been contested in the courts, culminating in a September 2020 ruling by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the law could stand and that former felons would have to pay this dressed-up poll tax before voting.

Poll taxes are illegal under the 24th Amendment, but that doesn’t matter when the courts are packed with right-wing judges put in place to help Republicans maintain their power by restricting voting accessibility as much as possible. (Six of the 12 11th Circuit judges are Trump appointees.)

Beyond the illegality of what is fundamentally a poll tax, Florida has no central system for determining the outstanding fines and fees a former inmate still owes. Even then, if one managed to determine the balances, it is incredibly difficult for folks leaving the prison system to make such payments because the obstacles society places between them and a swift return to stable housing and the labor force. Both are necessary for generating the income required to pay the fees.

Not every person whose rights were restored would have voted, but even 25 percent of 1.4 million people might have shifted the result all by itself when the margin of victory stands at less than 400,000 votes. A significant swath of those mostly poor, mostly Black and Brown people might have been the decisive factor in the outcome of Florida’s contribution to the presidential election. They should not have been denied their right to vote by the Florida legislature, the governor, or the 11th Circuit.

Felon re-enfranchisement is crucial for building a working-class movement and a powerful electorate on the Left. People released from prison are often those most in need of a social safety net — and yet they are the most excluded from it, lacking resources and a place to rebuild their lives. Leftists have a duty to work for restoring voting rights to those both inside and free from prison.

Facebook Twitter Share

Guest Posts

Echoes of Resilience: Even Beyond Gaza Palestinian Families Are Torn Apart

A nurse from Nablus in the West Bank talks about how the war has affected work and even in vitro fertilization.

Occupy Against the Occupation: Protest Camp in Front of Germany’s Parliament

Since Monday, April 8, pro-Palestinian activists have been braving Germany's bleak climate — both meteorological and political — to protest the Israeli genocide in Gaza, and the unconditional German support for it. 

Erik de Jong

April 20, 2024

Rutgers Faculty Denounce Silencing of Pro-Palestine Speech at Universities

Below we republish a statement from Rutgers Faculty for Justice in Palestine denouncing the Congressional hearings against free speech in support of Palestine at universities.

South Korean president Yoon Suk-Yeol.

South Korea’s Legislative Election: A Loss for the Right-Wing President, but a Win for the Bourgeois Regime

South Korea’s legislative elections on April 10 were a decisive blow to President Yoon Suk-Yeol — but a win for the bourgeois regime.

Joonseok

April 18, 2024

MOST RECENT

LAPD cracking down on the UCLA Palestine solidarity encampment on the evening of May 1.

Solidarity with the UCLA Encampment against Zionists and the LAPD

The Gaza Solidarity Encampment at UCLA was attacked by a mob of Zionists, then brutally cleared by the LAPD. The encampments need our full solidarity against cops and Zionists.

Julia Wallace

May 2, 2024
Healthcare workers at a pro-Palestine rally. Sign reads "Healthcare workds for a free palestine"

Healthcare Workers Stand in Solidarity with the Student Movement against Repression and for a Free Palestine

In response to the repression that university students have faced in the last weeks, we urge healthcare workers and their unions around the world to sign a solidarity letter against repression and for a free Palestine.

Mike Pappas

May 2, 2024
Police begin to storm City College of New York, CUNY Palestine solidarity encampment on the evening of April 30, 2024.

City University of New York Workers Announce Wildcat Sickout After NYPD Arrests Over 100 of Their Students and Colleagues

CUNY workers announced a wildcat sickout after NYPD raided City College's Gaza Solidarity Encampment. It's the first known job action in the PSC union’s 52-year history.

Left Voice

May 1, 2024
NYPD arrest protesters at City College of New York, CUNY, following a raid on the encampment for Palestine. April 30, 2024.

All Out for Gaza and against Police Repression on May Day

Just hours before May Day, NYPD attacked peaceful pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia University and City College. As we march for a free Palestine, the working class must also march against the repression faced by those who stand up against the genocide.