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One step closer to Democracy

by Dave Newton last modified August-04-2008 08:56 AM

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Carl Matthews of Louisville was one of 186,000 disenfranchised voters in the state of Kentucky - people who can't vote because of something they did wrong in their past.  He was convicted of a felony and he served his time... but he couldn't vote because Kentucky is one of only two states that require former felons to get a "partial pardon" from the Governor to allow them to vote again. 

All of that changed at 2 p.m. on Friday afternoon when Carl opened a letter from Steve Beshear letting him know that he'd gotten his right to vote restored.

"I couldn't believe it," Carl said.  "When I saw that gold seal and letter from the governor saying I could vote, I was just so happy."

Carl had been familiar with Kentuckians For The Commonwealth and our Restoration campaign for a while now, and met some of our members at PAR's Recovery Rally in Louisville last year. 

He'd learned about the restoration process long ago, but didn't apply until April of this year after learning about how the process had been streamlined by Beshear. 

I read about KFTC online and learned a lot about Restoration from your website.  I downloaded the application to get my rights back and sent it in.  it took a few months, but it worked."

Carl got his rights back just a few hours before attending the KFTC Voter Empowerment Training in Louisville this weekend and shared the news with everyone there.  He got to register to vote with us and is committed to sharing his story, lobbying with us on Restoration, and working to get more people involved. 

We have to reach more former felons and get them involved too," says Carl.  Volunteering is important - and it makes a difference when you have someone to talk to about stuff like this.  It helps with recovery and with becoming a part of our communities again."

Congratulations!

Posted by Emily P. at August-04-2008 02:50 AM
Congratulations!

Thank You All!

Posted by Carl at August-05-2008 08:14 PM
Thank You for the kind word!

Carl is awesome

Posted by martin at August-05-2008 07:58 AM
I met Carl at the Pushback meeting in Louisville. I am so proud that he will be voting in this fall elections.

You are AWESOME too!

Posted by Carl at August-05-2008 08:16 PM
You are AWESOME too! Your kind words mean so much to any disenfranchised person, especially to me at this hour of EMPOWERMENT! YES!. Thank you again.

Can't wait to hear more from Carl

Posted by Beth at August-05-2008 11:47 PM
Meeting Carl and hearing just a little of his story really goes to show the significance of the work we're doing around Voter Empowerment and Restoration. I look forward to seeing more of Carl as I think he would be a great voice for Restoration and Voter Empowerment throughout the state.

Exactly

Posted by Rubix at August-07-2008 02:45 AM
This is exactly the kind of story we need to hear to educate people about felon voting rights.

Felons are just people - people any of us can relate to.

Congrats!

Posted by Joan Braune at August-07-2008 11:23 AM
Congratulations, Carl! I look forward to meeting you at some point, next time you come to speak or organize at UK or around Lexington.

The legislature’s decision to re-enfranchise so many voters was so exciting! It’s stuff like this that keeps us windmill-fighting activists going. Like Ghandi once said, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.” =)

congratulations, Carl

Posted by Jen Flinchum at August-07-2008 02:38 PM
Carl, I want to first offer my congratulations. The path to re-enfranchisement is not an easy one. I must say, though, that it is disheartening to learn that the process took months to complete. While those who are currently disenfranchised must work within the system in order to regain their rights, it is important that those of us who are able work to change the system so that people leaving the corrections system have their rights restored automatically.

voter rights

Posted by Sarah at August-07-2008 03:10 PM
This is a really great story. Congratulations, Carl!

Reading I got curious about the application process. In addition to the bureaucratic barrier being so great, does the governor also turn people down?

Folks do get turned down

Posted by Beth at August-07-2008 04:30 PM
I'm sure Dave could tell us more about this, but some people are turned down when they apply to have their rights re-instated. Below is from a Courier-Journal article put on the blog (find that here: http://www.kftc.org/blog/archive/2008/07/29/790-former-felons-can-vote-again-news-coverage)

Beshear said his policy still requires confirmation that a felon has fulfilled all sentencing requirements. In addition, he is extending to 30 days, from 15, the time given prosecutors to object.

"So far 56 applicants have been turned down based on the input from prosecutors," he said. "At the same time, those whose rights have been restored have served their time and paid their debt to society."

Yes

Posted by Dave at August-07-2008 06:55 PM
Yes - some people are turned down in the new process and it's not clear why. Different prosecutors have different standards they apply. Some, I suspect, approve everyone in the interest of greater democracy. Others look for any reason to say no.

But the greater problem isn't with the 56 people who were denied, but the 180,000+ who have never applied because they don't know how or because they've been intimidated by the process.

In most states, people automatically get their right to vote back when they've served their time, which is only fair.

KFTC wants to work with people like Carl to go through the process as it is and we're proud of our victory to streamline the process - but our real goal is a constitutional amendment to restore voting rights to everyone automatically after they've served their debt to society.

Folks like Carl who share their stories can help get us there.

Gov can and does deny some

Posted by Carl at August-11-2008 04:15 PM
Thanks for the Congrats, but we Owe KFTC organizers, volunteers and their families. Yes Gov. Beshear has denied 56 "based on prosecutor objections" as of Jun 29, 200, please see KFTC Blog entries under Voter Empowerment topic for more info . Love you All.

Carl M.