Pubdate: Tue, 03 Apr 2007
Source: AlterNet (US Web)
Copyright: 2007 Independent Media Institute
Contact:  http://www.alternet.org/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1451
Author: Nancy Scola
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

ROADMAP OF A PROGRESSIVE VICTORY

Why a humble campaign for felon voting rights in Rhode Island ended 
up being a tremendous win for all progressives.

In the heaps of victories that progressives joyously celebrated after 
Election Day, Nov. 7, one has passed remarkably unnoticed. It 
involves a ballot measure and a grassroots battle for civil rights, 
but has nothing to do with same-sex marriage or abortion rights -- 
those typical headline-grabbers.

What you may not have heard is that the people of Rhode Island voted 
to grant ex-felons the right to vote from the very moment they leave 
a prison's gates. And in doing so they expanded the civil rights of a 
demonized class -- rights, it's fair to say, that many voters hardly 
knew were missing in the first place.

That victory was not just important in the long battle for fair and 
just voting rights in this country. It's also a case study in 
"impossible" social action. Understanding how Rhode Island activists 
managed to make social justice a reality is instructive for anyone 
working for progressive change.

"Civil Death" Today

Does "felon" bring to mind only rapists and murders and perhaps drug 
dealers? It shouldn't, really. In many U.S. states, a felon is anyone 
convicted of a crime where the sentence could be more than one year. 
In practice, those offenses include not only rape and murder, but 
perjury and bouncing a check. Yes, Martha Stewart is a felon, in the 
eyes of the law.

America has always had felony voting bans. But their popularity 
spiked in the Reconstruction-era South after the 15th Amendment gave 
blacks the right to vote. Felony voting restrictions were a seemingly 
"race neutral" tool, like the poll tax, that in practice kept many 
blacks from the ballot box. (Currently, 1.4 million African-American 
men cannot vote because of past felony convictions.)

Historically, the severity of felony disenfranchisement laws in 
America draw inspiration from the idea of "civil death," a medieval 
construct that punished criminality by excising the offender from the 
body politic.

Today, it's not surprising if you hear "felons and "voting" and your 
mind jumps to Florida. In Gore vs. Bush, you'll remember, that state 
attempted to erase ex-felons from their voting rolls. In the process, 
they robbed thousands of legitimate voters of their franchise.

However, voting bans aren't limited to the Deep South. And they are 
in no way uniform. Three U.S. states -- Florida, Virginia, and 
Kentucky -- disenfranchise every ex-felon for life. Many other states 
restore rights at the completion of parole (conditional release) and 
probation (supervised reentry). Kill someone in Maine, and you can 
vote from your prison cell. Sell marijuana in Virginia, and for all 
intents and purposes you're banned from the ballot box for life.

Legal-types call it the "crazy quilt" of voting law, a patchwork of 
statutes and provisions that differ from state to state. Take the 
situation in the Four Corners region of America's southwest as an 
example. In Salt Lake City, Joe Felon gets his voting rights back 
while walking out of the prison gates. In Denver, he has to wait 
until his parole term is up. In Santa Fe, he must bide time until his 
probation term expires, which could be years or even decades. And in 
Phoenix, he'll never vote again.

Making History In Rhode Island

In light of the fickleness of our antiquated voting laws, let's 
assume you're convinced that America's legacy of felony 
disenfranchisement is egregious. Unconscionable, even. Then it's 
tempting to see restoration movements as a great battle for 
democracy. But as history is so often less exciting lived than read 
about later, victory in Rhode Island began in a humble way.

Located in an aging four-story house in Providence's struggling south 
side, the Family Life Center (FLC) provides social services for 
ex-prisoners. It was early summer, 2004, and an intern at FLC named 
Nina Keough needed a project.

She began compiling data on Rhode Islanders ineligible to vote 
because of criminal convictions. "We didn't necessarily think that 
much would come" of the project, says Dan Schleifer, FLC outreach 
director. That some ex-felons couldn't vote in Rhode Island was 
mostly a "curiosity."

But it turned out that the resulting 12-page report, "Political 
Punishment: The Consequences of Felon Disenfranchisement for Rhode 
Island Communities," was a gripping read. It found more than 15,000 
Rhode Islanders banned from the ballot box. One in five black men 
couldn't vote, and neither could one in 11 Hispanic men. Four percent 
of adults in Providence were ineligible.

And the ban hit urban communities incredibly hard. Nearly 80 percent 
of those affected lived in cities, particularly Central Falls, 
Pawtucket, Providence, Newport and Woonsocket. Drilling down farther, 
the neighborhood of Upper South Providence lost almost 10 percent of 
its potential voters, 35 times the rate of disenfranchisement in the 
northeast Providence neighborhood of Blackstone.

Suddenly a "curiosity" looked like a harsh political reality.

Report in hand, FLC realized it was on to something and went national 
with it, to the three organizations -- NYU's Brennan Center for 
Justice, the ACLU and the Sentencing Project -- that have for years 
collaborated on a national Right to Vote campaign.

The national coalition suggested to FLC that it could increase the 
press pickup of the report by releasing it in conjunction with a 
similar paper that found 14 percent of Atlanta's black men were 
banned from the ballot box. FLC agreed, and the tactic worked. In 
late September 2004, "Political Punishment" was featured not only in 
the Providence Journal but also the New York Times and the Washington Post.

The group has just learned its first important lesson: to link its 
research with other similar work to reach a larger audience -- in 
doing so it not only increased public education, but got political 
attention as well.

After that, things began to snowball. Local lawmakers, as legislators 
do, jumped to capitalize on the hot news story their constituents 
might be reading. Hearings on Rhode Island's felony voting ban were 
called in the General Assembly. Initial polling found Rhode Islanders 
generally warm to the idea of increasing felony voting rights. 
Progressive groups joined FLC in the effort, laying the groundwork 
for a statewide Restore the Vote coalition.

As momentum began to build, advocates had to grapple with the fact 
that the ban was baked into Article II Section I of the Rhode Island 
Constitution. What seemed at first a setback soon looked a lot like 
an advantage. Legislators would have put the question on the ballot 
- -- a constitutional amendment would live or die with voters on Election Day.

"Legislators weren't taking a huge political risk -- they weren't 
ratifying anything," Schleifer says. If change had required that 
lawmakers directly expand rights for criminals, ending civil death 
may well have been dead on arrival -- instead, it was up to the 
voters themselves. This proved the second important lesson.

As with any campaign, there are unexpected blessing, but also 
hurdles. It's fair to say that, looking back, the greatest obstacle 
in the path of Rhode Island's growing restoration movement wasn't the 
protestations of "tough on crime" conservatives or "lock 'em up" law 
enforcement. Instead, it was convoluted campaign finance laws.

As momentum built, a handful of national and local funders lined up 
to contribute to the Restore the Vote coalition. State law, however, 
restricted the work of foundations and nonprofits on ballot measures. 
What's more, it required parties working together on a ballot measure 
to form file as a PAC. Wrangling with campaign finance regulations 
was too complicated for tiny FLC, and the national campaign wasn't 
much help in deciphering the nuances of local law.

The law wasn't a clear restriction. But it was confusing enough to 
create a chilling effect. Local funders who had pledge contributions 
were wary of doing so with the law unclear. The national campaign was 
reluctant to dedicate funds to Rhode Island while the future there 
was murky. In the fall of 2005 the Restore the Vote coalition went 
into a holding pattern.

To be sure, FLC hadn't expected to become campaign finance reform 
advocates when it opened its doors in 2002. FLC had dedicated itself 
to helping ex-offenders navigate reentry into society during the 
critical period immediately after release. In some cases, the center 
was the first stop after prison for some, still clutching their 
prison-issued belongings.

"We were a new organization struggling to keep our doors open," says 
Sol Rodriguez, FLC's executive director. But FLC staff soon 
discovered that they couldn't do only hands-on service work and still 
meet their clients' needs. "It became clear that we needed to do 
policy work," says Schleifer.

It Takes A (Progressive) Community

In the end, the pillars of Rhode Island's progressive community -- 
the state branches of Common Cause and the ACLU, as well as the Rhode 
Island Foundation -- won the needed change in the state's campaign 
finance laws. Those groups had been agitating for change in the 
courts for years, in particular as part of an effort to fund a 
campaign around Question 9, a $50 million bond measure on affordable 
housing. This was the third important lesson -- progressive issues 
are intertwined, and change involves working with allies to cut across issues.

The "Restore the Vote" campaign, of which all three organizations 
were coalition partners, brought new impetus. But as time passed and 
Election Day 2006 loomed on the horizon, judicial remedy looked like 
it would come too late. The progressive big guns, now joined by FLC, 
began pursuing a legislative strategy.

They worked with Board of Elections officials to craft a new statute 
that would free their hands. Meanwhile, there was action in the 
courts -- in May, a judge struck down the provision restricting the 
advocacy work by foundations and nonprofits. The General Assembly, 
spurred by the judge's ruling, did away with the provision that 
required that coalition partners organize as a PAC.

With the campaign finance question settled in late summer, funding 
flowed in. Restore the Vote switched gears from barely sustaining a 
general-education coalition to ramping up what amounted to a 
traditional, albeit low-budget, political campaign. (In the end, the 
entire campaign would end up costing in the neighborhood of $300,000.)

But here again was a challenge. By the time that the campaign finance 
law was settled in August, Election Day was just two months away. 
Rhode Island's experienced political talent had been snatched up 
earlier in the cycle by gubernatorial campaigns or had gone to work 
in the high-profile Chafee vs. Whitehouse Senate race. Out of 
necessity, Rodriguez eventually ended up directing the campaign. And, 
"out of ignorance," Schleifer jokes, he became the campaign's de 
facto field director.

What's more, there was a new idea in the air about how much issue 
campaigns should pay. "Restore the Vote" was Question 2 on the 
November ballot; Question 1 was a gambling provision, supported by 
the Narragansett Indian Tribe and funded by the very deep pockets of 
the Harrah's gaming corporation. Ocean state organizers could bag a 
bigger paycheck working to pass Question 1 than they could do the 
same on Question 2.

"We had limited resources," says Rodriguez. And with Election Day now 
just over the horizon, even less time. "We really tried to figure out 
ways to use our resources creatively." The coalition learned how to 
direct its resources in the most efficient way. It made the 
cost-cutting decision not to spend much money at all on paid 
advertising. Building support for extending rights to voters required 
some convincing of voters, and, says Rodriguez, "It's really 
difficult to persuade people through purchased media."

Instead, says Rodriguez, the coalition decided to focus its efforts 
on Rhode Islanders already inclined to be sympathetic on the issue, 
who with a little education could form an active base of supporters. 
Many of them knew someone who couldn't vote themselves, says 
Rodriguez. It was an approach not without risks. The coalition was 
hitching its wagon to voters who hadn't always turned out on Election Day.

Schleifer began to build a corps of volunteers who could both win 
over voters and make sure they turned out to vote. As it turned out, 
some Restore the Vote volunteers were themselves disenfranchised or 
had loved ones who were. But much of that corps was drawn from the 
student bodies of Rhode Island College and Brown. Says Schleifer, "We 
wouldn't have won without those students" -- another important lesson.

Their field strategy assumed that votes would break even in the 
suburbs, and so they scaled back from a campaign that would cover the 
whole 1,545-square-mile state and instead focused their energies and 
attention on the cities of Providence, Pawtucket, Newport and 
Woonsocket. Frankly, it was a strategy borne of necessity -- they 
just didn't have the cash to pay canvassers to work the suburbs.

But the campaign's shallow pockets may have been a blessing, the 
concentration of the campaign was one reason opposition was scattered 
and dispirited while support ran high among state leaders. The 
arguments against felon enfranchisement were largely limited to the 
idea that voting bans were reasonable punitive responses to very 
serious crimes. (According to one such sentiment, voiced by a few 
state senators, "When you kill someone, you take away all their 
rights forever.") But that thinking never seemed to gain traction.

In a drive to get endorsements, the coalition's steering committee 
members worked their personal relationships -- a key strategy. "Rhode 
Island is a unique place, with no degree of separation," says 
Rodriguez, and "once we got one mayor, we got another." In an op-ed 
in the Providence Journal weeks before Election Day, the Providence 
chief of police wrote that "restoring voting rights ... would 
strengthen our democracy and enhance public safety." Schleifer admits 
that the chief "got a lot of shit from conservative talk radio and 
the rank-and-file," but that his support "gave some people a level of comfort."

The Final Countdown

Days and weeks ticked by, endorsements mounted up, pavement was 
pounded, doors were knocked, and urban voters were hammered with the 
"Vote Yes on Question 2" message. At the very end, the coalition 
scraped together a bit of money and more than a hundred committed 
volunteers, many of whom had been campaigning without pay for months 
now, were made paid campaign staff for the final four-day push.

Now all that was needed was a place to headquarter all those warm 
bodies. An apartment was rented in Pawtucket, hotel rooms booked in 
Newport and Woonsocket. Schleifer's house in the west side of 
Providence was commandeered, as was a student volunteer's house on 
the east side of town.

Erica Sagrans, an AmericaCorp fellow at FLC who was active on the 
campaign, said that in one case, rental papers for an apartment 
weren't signed until Friday, Nov. 3, just hours before student 
volunteers were due to arrive. She and Schleifer, Sagrans says, spent 
the night hauling chairs into the apartment and hanging signs in the 
hallways, letting the neighbors know that a bunch of people would be 
tramping in and out of their building in the next four days.

Election Day came. In the end, the cities turned out big. Question 2 
won, 51 percent to 49 percent by the final count. (In the end, 
Harrah's and the Narragansett Indian Tribe lost on Question 1 in a 63 
percent to 37 percent drubbing. The final cost of that campaign -- 
$14 million.) Restore the Vote proved that money matters -- not how 
much you have, but how well you spend it.

Looking back, from an intern's summer project to reform of the 
state's campaign finance laws to the guidance of national 
organizations to the focused strategy borne of the campaign's 
shoestring budget, everything seemed to fall in place when it needed 
to. "It was absolutely a perfect storm," said Rodriguez.

What It All Means

The expansion of voting rights in Rhode Island was a big concrete 
victory for voting rights activists, in that state and nationwide. 
But felony disenfranchisement doesn't exist in a bubble. It should be 
understood in the larger context of American civic life. It's "part 
and parcel of the way that we do democracy in this country," says Ana 
Munoz, field coordinator at the Brennan Center for Justice.

Digging into these issues, you strike at the fiber of American 
civics, where discussions over having to show a driver's license at 
the voting station spiral into a complex conversations on immigration 
and harkens back to the days of the poll tax.

But the Rhode Island victory is also an instructive win for the 
progressive community. FLC admits it more or less made things up as 
it went along, charting new ground for the organization. It succeeded 
because of its willingness to reach out to other forward-thinking 
organizations to develop alliances, its scrappy and creative use of 
resources, and its skill at exploiting every opportunity for public education.

Thanks also to its own efforts of strategic voter mobilization, and 
likely thanks to the other issue groups and Democratic campaigns that 
worked to move progressive voters to the polls on Nov. 7, in the end, 
FLC walked away with a majority of the vote and a change in law.

"Every civil rights change," says Munoz, "seems impossible at the 
time." But of course, we can look at Rhode Island as one more of 
example of how nothing is impossible. The harder progressives work 
and the more we figure out how to work together, the more we can 
achieve the social change we want to see -- no matter how daunting 
the task might seem at first.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman