The states where it’s impossible to vote if you have a felony conviction
While states in recent years have moved away from Jim Crow-era policies, several still make it difficult for people leaving prison to regain the right to vote
When a US federal appeals court issued an opinion last month striking down Mississippi's practice of revoking voting rights for life from people convicted of certain felonies, the state lost its designation as the most difficult for people with felony convictions to restore their right to vote.
The fifth circuit court of appeals panel found that the state's felony disenfranchisement policy violated the constitution's protection against cruel and unusual punishment. The ruling followed a pattern of states in recent years moving away from their Jim Crow-era policies - an estimated 4.6 million Americans were barred from participating in elections as of October 2022, a number that's down 24% since 2016, according to the Sentencing Project.
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