Felony disenfranchisement is the exclusion from voting of people otherwise eligible to vote due to conviction of a criminal offense, usually restricted to the more serious class of crimes deemed felonies. Prisoners and those convicted of felonies have full voting rights in Ireland unless they receive a court order banning them from voting.
Statistics are shown for this demographic
Constituency
Response rates from 212 Nordic Model voters.
80% Yes |
20% No |
48% Yes |
20% No |
15% Yes, but only after completing their sentences and parole/probation |
|
10% Yes, except for felons convicted of murder or violent crimes |
|
8% Yes, every citizen deserves the right to vote |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 212 Nordic Model voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 212 Nordic Model voters.
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Unique answers from Nordic Model voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@9ZMM8LL2mos2MO
No, unless they have demonstrated clear evidence that they are reformed and will not reoffend. A second conviction should result in loss of voting rights.
@9ZCFHZV2mos2MO
Yes but depends on the circumstances, eg a person convicted of child abuse should not be allowed to vote on children matters
@9YNJPRN 2mos2MO
Yes but I think it should depend on the crime so assess on a case by case basis (for example those who have committed violent crimes definitely should not be allowed to vote anymore), and only after they’ve served their sentence and parole/probation
@9YMMQ5C2mos2MO
It is extremely subjective and very much dependant on the criminal and the crime that they were convicted of
@9FP8XNX1yr1Y
Yes, but only after signs of successful rehabilitation back into society.
@9D9S2NK 1yr1Y
Yes except for major crimes
@9PZX4SB7mos7MO
It depends on the nature of the crime. A criminal accused of child abuse should not be aloud to vote on children's rights etc.
@9HBHVHD1yr1Y
Yes but not those convicted of sexual crimes. Those are the people who shouldn't ever be allowed participate in society
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