Federal Appeals Court Declines to Restore Voting Rights for Mississippi
For Now, Countless Mississippians Still Stuck in Discriminatory System Designed to Deny a Voice to the Black Community
NEW ORLEANS聽鈥 On Wednesday, Aug. 24, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined to restore voting rights for tens of thousands of returning citizens in its ruling in . Plaintiffs in 贬补谤苍别蝉蝉听asserted a race-based equal protection challenge to the state constitutional provision removing voting rights for individuals with certain felony convictions. Harness was brought by the and cooperating law firms.
However, in ruling for the State defendants, the Court in Harness limited its decision to the claims in that case. It did not address the different challenges to Mississippi鈥檚 disenfranchisement and re-enfranchisement system raised in , which was聽filed by the and . Hopkins vs. Hosemann remains pending before the Fifth Circuit.聽
Full text of the decision in Harness can be found
Ahmed Soussi voting rights staff attorney with the 人兽性交:
鈥淚t is disappointing that the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against Roy Harness and the tens of thousands of people with previous felony convictions in Mississippi who are still blocked from exercising their freedom to vote. However, we are eager and hopeful to continue challenging Mississippi鈥檚 cruel practice of stripping voting rights through our pending case, Hopkins vs. Hosemann, and create a pathway for those citizens to have their rights restored.
鈥淎s of now, countless Mississippians will still be stuck in a discriminatory system that was designed to deny a voice to the Black community. However, we must continue striving for full voting rights to be restored to all Mississippians. We believe that the right to vote is the most fundamental freedom in a democracy, and that no one should be deprived of that right.鈥