Millions of new voters could register across the country, starting Tuesday, with the launch of an online tool meant to help former felons restore their right to vote. The Campaign Legal Center’s website, restoreyourvote.org, attempts to guide users through a sometimes confusing jumble of state laws to determine whether past convictions or unpaid fines would keep them from the ballot box. It is the latest salvo in a growing movement to politically empower formerly incarcerated people, a group that is disproportionately African-American. It is unclear how much of an effect such efforts will have on elections because they are more likely to infuse urban areas that already lean left with more Democratic voters. But organizers have framed the issue as a question of civil rights.
“There is a lot of misinformation, and the laws can be complicated,” said Blair Bowie, a Campaign Legal Center voting rights fellow. “This certainly is an opportunity for people with convictions to assert their voices in elections.”
Bowie pointed to Alabama, where a beta version of the site launched last year, around the time Democrat Doug Jones won an upset Senate victory over Republican former judge Roy Moore by 20,000 votes.
The state’s felony voter laws are among the most restrictive in the country, partly due to a statute that prohibits people convicted of crimes of “moral turpitude” from voting.
Full Article: For Former Felons, Voting Rights Could Be a Click Away.