Bob Casey Jr Finally Concedes to Dave McCormick in Pennsylvania Senate Race
This TOTALLY Did Not Happen! Climate Activist Says Hurricanes Convinced His Barber Climate...
LET THEM FIGHT: Cenk Uygur Calls Out Joy Behar and 'The View' and...
Daily Mail: We're All Gonna Die From Climate Change! (In 75 Years, That...
'You'll See Things Our Way': Jaguar DOUBLES DOWN on Cringe Ad With Vaguely...
Mayor of Dearborn, Michigan Will Have Netanyahu Arrested If He Enters the City
Biden's America: NFL Issues Security Alert for Players Regarding S. American Crime Syndica...
Karine Jean-Pierre Explains How Much Cheaper Your Thanksgiving Meal Is This Year Thanks...
Nancy Mace Goes 'There' Ending Adam Kinzinger for Trying to Pick a Fight...
Good Luck With That! British MPs Plan to Summon Elon Musk to the...
Twitter Reminds Mopey 'Pod Bro' Jon Favreau What Obama ACTUALLY Brought About
Burning Down the House? Biden Loosens Immigration Requirements Prior to Leaving Office
Big Bad Denver, Colorado Mayor Says He Will Protect Illegals From the Federal...
Taylor Lorenz's Reasoning for Why She LOVES the Vibe on Bluesky Made Me...
J.K. Rowling - $7.7 Billion, Trans Activists - Zero: HBO Stands by Rowling...

California legislators move closer to giving felons the right to vote

President Obama has made criminal justice reform one of his top No. 1 priorities during his final year in office and is actually following through, commuting the sentences of hundreds of supposedly nonviolent felons and urging private businesses to follow the government’s lead in removing questions about prior convictions from job applications.

Advertisement

Gov. Terry McAuliffe of Virginia gave the president a hand in April when he used his executive power to restore voting rights to more than 200,000 convicted felons just in time to vote for Hillary Clinton, and the movement continues across the country.

The legislation still has to make it through the state senate, but on Tuesday, California’s Assembly took its own steps to grant felons voting rights, redefining terms such as “imprisoned” in order to restore voting eligibility for felons in county (but not state or federal) jails, on probation or under community supervision.

The bill passed by a 41-34 vote, presumably without the support of U.S. Navy veteran and Assembly member Melissa Melendez.

Advertisement

But … knowing that they can play a part in the electoral process gives felons a sense of social responsibility, reduces recidivism, slows global climate change and makes rainbows glow just a little brighter. Just last week, Assembly member Shirley Weber celebrated another legislative victory with the passage of her restorative justice bill.

Where existing law treats imprisonment as punishment for a crime committed, Weber’s bill would declare instead that “the purpose of sentencing is public safety achieved through accountability, rehabilitation, and restorative justice.”

 

 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement