Dictionary Definition
disenfranchisement n : the act of withdrawing
certification or terminating a franchise [ant: certification]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Explicit or implicit revocation of, or failure to grant the right to vote, to a person or group of people.
Translations
explicit or implicit revocation of, or failure
to grant the right to vote
- German: Wahlrechtsausschluss , Wahlrechtsentzug
Extensive Definition
Disenfranchisement or disfranchisement is the
revocation of the right of suffrage (the right to vote) to
a person or group of people, or rendering a person's vote less
effective, or ineffective. Disfranchisement might occur explicitly
through law, or implicitly by intimidation.
Disfranchisement at place of residence and minorities
In proportional representation systems which use election thresholds, parties which fail to meet the specified thresholds often claim that their supporters have been disfranchised since their votes do not translate into any legislative seats, and thus effectively do not count.Voters in the District
of Columbia, the U.S. capital, are subject to a partial
disfranchisement: they are not represented in Congress.
Until the passage of the
Twenty-Third Amendment in 1961, they did not get to vote in
presidential elections. Prior to the
District of Columbia Home Rule Act in 1973, they did not elect
their own mayor.
An example of unintentional disfranchisement of a
group of people is expounded by supporters of the U.S.
Electoral College. Briefly, electoral college supporters feel
that strict majority vote would disfranchise the mostly rural
American West, by denying them the ability to ever influence an
election due to their small numbers. This would be unintentional
disfranchisement as it is an effect of the change, not a direct
goal of the change in voting law.
Another example is the disfranchisement of entire
groups of people, such as fathers, women, unmarried or non-custodial
parents, various racial, ethnic or religious minorities depending
on the country, or members of some political groups. This has led
to warfare, as in the case of the American
Revolutionary War (the cry "No
taxation without representation" conveys this message). This is
a good example of the intentional disfranchisement of a group of
people (British colonists in America) by
the government in Britain.
Similarly, the US citizens of Puerto Rico
are subjected to many U.S. laws and in the past, have been
conscripted to fight in US wars, but they have no Congressional
representation or vote in presidential elections. Puerto Rico
residents are subject to most U.S. taxes but are generally not
subject to U.S. income tax laws unless they work for the U.S.
Government or fall under various other exceptions.
Minors under the
voting age are also disenfranchised. While this is supported by the
idea that minors lack the capacity to cast an independent vote,
minors are almost always subject to taxation by state and federal
governments.
In Puerto Rico (United States Commonwealth Territory)
Various scholars (including a prominent U.S.
judge in the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit)
conclude that the U.S. national-electoral process is not a
democracy due to issues around
voting rights in Puerto Rico. Citizens residing in Puerto Rico
are not counted in the U.S. Census as part of the estimates it
provides of the U.S. population. Furthermore, any U.S. citizen that
moves to Puerto Rico (be it a Puerto
Rican or not) loses his or her right to vote in any U.S.
legislative and executive election at the national level. This is
despite the U.S. Government Executive and Legislative Branches
holding ultimate sovereignty over all U.S. Citizens and the
territory of Puerto Rico. Both the
Puerto Rican Independence Party and the New
Progressive Party have rejected the status quo that permits
disfranchisement (from their distinct respective positions on the
ideal enfranchised status for the island-nation of Puerto Rico).
The remaining political organization, the
Popular Democratic Party, is less active in its opposition of
this case of disfranchisement but has officially stated that it
favors fixing the remaining "deficits of democracy" that the
Bill
Clinton and George W.
Bush administrations have publicly recognized in writing
through Presidential Task Force Reports.
Disfranchisement due to criminal conviction
In the USA
Many U.S. states
intentionally disfranchise people based on criminal conviction by
law. For many jurisdictions that do, usually a person is
disfranchised after being sentenced to a penalty above some
limit—for example, 6 months— but only as long
as he or she is serving the sentence.
In 13 U.S. states including the District
of Columbia (HI, IL, IN, MA, MI, MT, NH, ND, OH, OR, PA, RI,
UT) persons convicted of a felony—that is, a crime
punishable with a year's imprisonment or more—are denied
the vote only while serving sentence in a state prison. Delaware has a
similar law, but extends the disfranchisement period five years
after release from custody.
One felony conviction results in perpetual disfranchisement in
10 other U.S. states, and in Maryland two
convictions have the same consequence. In addition to these 11
states, 19 others also disfranchise persons who are on probation for a felony but
were not sentenced to prison time. All of these plus five more
states (or 35 in all) disqualify those on parole from voting.
Some states consider dishonorable
discharge a felony conviction and disfranchise those
affected.
Two states—Maine and Vermont—allow
prison inmates to vote unless disfranchisement is meted out as a
separate punishment.
Those affected are usually prohibited from voting
in federal elections as well, even though their convictions were at
the state level for state crimes, not federal crimes. This means
that states with permanent disfranchisement prevent ex-convicts
from ever voting in federal elections, even though ex-convicts in
other states convicted of identical crimes may be allowed to vote
in such elections.
As of 2005 there were at least two cases in the
U.S. courts challenging disfranchisement of felons: Locke v.
Farrakhan in Washington State and Hayden v. Pataki in New York. The
NAACP
LDF was involved in both cases.
In the UK
In the United
Kingdom, all convicts are denied the right to vote while in
prison. This is, however, under review, following an October
2005 ruling of
the
European Court of Human Rights that a blanket ban is
disproportionate. The review is still underway, but
Lord Falconer of Thoroton, the
Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs has stated that
it may result in some, but not all, prisoners being able to
vote.
In Germany
In Germany, all
convicts are allowed to vote while in prison unless the loss of the
right to vote is part of the sentence; courts can only hand out
this sentence for specific "political" crimes (treason, high
treason, electoral
fraud, intimidation of voters etc) and for a duration of two to
five years. All convicts sentenced to at least one year in prison
also automatically lose the right to be elected in public elections
for a duration of five years, and lose all positions they held as a
result of such elections.
In Israel
Inmates are allowed to vote in Israel, and there
is likewise no subsequent disfranchisement of felons following
parole, probation, or release from prison. Neither courts nor
prison authorities have the power to disqualify any person from
exercising the right to vote in national elections, whatever cause
of imprisonment (i.e., including politically-related crimes). In
fact, local scholarship has suggested that persons at odds with the
law maintain a special interest in influencing the political
process.
In other countries
In some countries, such as China, Portugal,
disfranchisement due to criminal conviction is an exception, meted
out separately or alone. This is usually imposed on a person
convicted of a crime against the state (see civil death)
or one related to election or public office.
In Belgium people who
repeatedly fail to vote lose their right to vote.
Disfranchisement due to criminal conviction
(otherwise than for electoral offences) is discussed extensively in
the website of the Sentencing
Project, an organization concerned with reducing prison
sentences and ameliorating some of the negative effects of
incarceration. Although the information provided by this
organization is biased against various practices, the website
provides a wealth of statistical data that reflects data available
from organizations with opposing views, and from the United
States government and various state governments.
Notes
See also
- Disfranchisement in the United States after Reconstruction
- Lishenets (disfranchised in the Soviet Union)''
- Non-citizens (Latvia)
- Nuremberg Laws
References
- "Election Readiness: It Is Never Too Late for Transparency", October 2004, from Fair Election International (FEI), a project of Global Exchange, quoted in part in AfricaFocus Bulletin Oct 26, 2004