Tennessee Says Residents Can't Vote If They Have Lost Their Gun Rights
People who were disenfranchised based on felony convictions face a new obstacle to recovering their voting rights.

Tennessee, which imposes notoriously demanding requirements on residents with felony records seeking restoration of their voting rights, recently added a new wrinkle: Before supplicants who have not managed to obtain a pardon are allowed to vote again, they have to successfully seek restoration of their gun rights, a task that is complicated by the interaction between state and federal law. Given the difficulty of obtaining relief from the federal gun ban for people convicted of crimes punishable by more than a year of incarceration, this requirement would be prohibitive in practice.
If it is upheld by Tennessee courts, the new policy would essentially mean "there's no way to vote" for people who were disenfranchised based on their criminal records, says Adam Ginsburg, a spokesman for the Campaign Legal Center (CLC), which has challenged Tennessee's voting requirements in federal court. Even without the problem created by federal gun laws, CLC attorney Blair Bowie says, people convicted of drug felonies or violent crimes "will not be able to restore their gun rights" under Tennessee law. "It's beyond the pale," she says. But she adds that "it's still an open question, because the Elections Division, which governs who can register to vote in Tennessee, clearly hasn't really thought that through."
The new requirement would further complicate a process that is already hard to navigate. "Tennessee has the most convoluted, harsh and poorly managed rights restoration process of any state in the country," the CLC reported in 2022. Among other things, "Tennessee is one of only a handful of states that conditions the right to vote on payment of legal debt and the only state that requires a person to be current on child support to restore their voting rights."
Tennessee's obstacles to re-enfranchisement have had the sort of impact you might expect. "Over 450,000 citizens—accounting for more than 9% of the voting age population—are denied the right to vote because of past felony convictions," the CLC noted. "Since 2016, less than 1% of post-sentence Tennesseans have gotten their voting rights back due to modern-day poll taxes and issues with obtaining a Certificate of Restoration," which requires a court order.
Why is Tennessee making an arduous process even more difficult? According to a statement that Tennessee Coordinator of Elections Mark Goins gave The Tennessean, the state's Supreme Court "made it clear" in the 2023 case Falls v. Goins that "a felon must receive a pardon from the governor or other appropriate authority or have his or her full citizenship rights restored as part of the path to regain the right to vote." Under the Tennessee Constitution, Goins said, "the right to bear arms is a right of citizenship." Article I, Section 26 of the state constitution says "the citizens of this State have a right to keep and to bear arms for their common defense," adding that the legislature nevertheless "shall have power, by law, to regulate the wearing of arms with a view to prevent crime."
Since the right to arms is "a right of citizenship," Goins said, it follows that anyone who is still legally barred from owning guns is not allowed to vote unless he obtains a pardon. That is a reversal of the position that state election officials were taking as recently as last December. When Goins was deposed in the CLC case on December 13, The Tennessean reports, "the Secretary of State's office did not consider gun rights as part of the 'full rights of citizenship' necessary for voting." A "training document" that Goins read during his deposition, which was still being used as of May 2022, included this clarification: "Gun rights are also a citizenship right, but they involve overlapping federal laws so it's okay if those are not restored as long as the other citizenship rights are restored."
Not anymore, according to Goins. And those "overlapping federal laws" pose a real problem for people convicted of the "infamous crimes" that trigger disenfranchisement in Tennessee. "Any felony" falls into that category, so it includes drug law violations and other nonviolent offenses as well as violent crimes.
Under 18 USC 922(g)(1), it is a felony for someone to receive or possess a firearm if he has been convicted "in any court" of "a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year." And under Tennessee law, possessing a firearm is a misdemeanor for anyone who qualifies as a "prohibited person" under federal law. So according to the new interpretation of Tennessee's requirements, a resident seeking restoration of his voting rights first has to recover his gun rights under federal law, which is currently impossible for someone convicted of a state felony.
Under 18 USC 925(c), a prohibited person notionally can apply to the attorney general for relief of the disability imposed by Section 922(g)(1). The attorney general "may grant such relief if it is established to his satisfaction that the circumstances regarding the disability, and the applicant's record and reputation, are such that the applicant will not be likely to act in a manner dangerous to public safety and that the granting of the relief would not be contrary to the public interest." If relief is denied, the applicant can challenge that decision in federal court. But this process is only theoretically available to people with felony records, because Congress decided they should not be able to use it.
"Although federal law provides a means for the relief of firearms disabilities," the Justice Department's Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) warns, "ATF's annual appropriation since October 1992 has prohibited the expending of any funds to investigate or act upon applications for relief from federal firearms disabilities submitted by individuals. As long as this provision is included in current ATF appropriations, ATF cannot act upon applications for relief from federal firearms disabilities submitted by individuals." Consequently, the new hoop that Tennessee election officials have set up is blocked by a brick wall.
Falls v. Goins, the 2023 decision that Goins says requires that new hoop, did not actually address the issue of whether gun rights are a prerequisite for voting rights. The question was whether someone convicted of a disqualifying crime in another state and subsequently pardoned by the governor of that state was subject to a Tennessee law requiring payment of "outstanding court costs, restitution, and child support obligations" prior to re-enfranchisement. The lead plaintiff, Ernest Falls, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Virginia in 1986 and moved to Tennessee in 2018. Two years later, Falls was "granted clemency in Virginia by then-Governor Ralph Northam," which reinstated "Falls' rights of citizenship in Virginia, including his right to vote."
Northam's clemency, Falls argued, automatically made him eligible to vote in Tennessee. He cited a Tennessee law that says a person convicted in another state of an offense that "would constitute an infamous crime" in Tennessee may not vote "unless" he "has been pardoned or restored to the rights of citizenship by the governor or other appropriate authority of such other state." The Tennessee Supreme Court rejected Falls' argument, saying he still had to meet the additional requirements that Tennessee imposes on people convicted in that state.
That decision quoted statutory language referring to "full rights of citizenship." But it did not define those rights, and the only references to firearms appeared in a footnote quoting Northam's grant of clemency. Notably, that document said Northam was restoring Falls' "right to vote, hold public office, serve on a jury, and to be a notary public," but not "the ability to ship, transport, possess or receive firearms." The Tennessee Supreme Court nevertheless described Northam's clemency as restoring "Mr. Falls' rights of citizenship."
Bowie, who thinks Goins' interpretation of Tennessee law is "totally bogus," finds his reliance on Falls v. Goins puzzling. "The Supreme Court explicitly says [the decision is] limited to the facts before it," she says. "Specifically, it's referring to the situation where somebody gets a conviction in another state, moves to Tennessee, and then restores their voting rights in the state where they used to live." The court ruled that someone in that situation "still [has] to go through Tennessee's rights restoration process," Bowie notes, and the justices "wouldn't even opine" on the question of what would happen "if he had gotten his rights restored in Virginia before he moved to Tennessee. So it's extremely narrow."
Whatever the merits of Goins' legal interpretation, it highlights the injustice of permanently taking away someone's Second Amendment rights based on a felony conviction, no matter the nature of the crime or how long ago it was committed. A growing number of federal judges, including Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett when she served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, have deemed that blanket ban unconstitutional. History "demonstrates that legislatures have the power to prohibit dangerous people from possessing guns," Barrett wrote in a 2019 dissent. "But that power extends only to people who are dangerous."
That case involved a man convicted of mail fraud, which Barrett thought did not justify disarming him for the rest of his life. In the 2022 Supreme Court case New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, Barrett joined the majority in ruling that gun control laws must be "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation." Since then, lower courts have rejected applications of Section 922(g)(1) that they concluded did not meet that test.
Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit restored the Second Amendment rights of a Pennsylvania man who had been convicted of food stamp fraud. Although that was a misdemeanor and did not result in any jail time, it triggered Section 922(g)(1) because it was theoretically punishable by up to five years in prison. Applying that precedent last November, a federal judge likewise said it was unconstitutional to take away a man's gun rights based on a misdemeanor DUI conviction.
Theoretically, such litigation is one option for Tennessee residents who want to be able to vote despite an "infamous crime" conviction, although federal courts may be less receptive in cases involving drug felonies, let alone violent offenses. Another option is seeking a pardon from Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, which would allow re-enfranchisement even without a "full restoration of citizenship rights" as Goins now understands that phrase. But that is also a long shot: Since taking office in 2019, Lee has granted just 48 pardons: 13 in 2021, 13 in 2022, and 22 last year. Tennessee residents convicted in other states might face better odds, although out-of-state pardons do not necessarily satisfy Tennessee's requirements, as Falls' case shows.
The best hope for people in this situation is that Tennessee courts will reject Goins' interpretation of state law, at least insofar as it requires restoration of federal gun rights. "If somebody goes to court in Tennessee to get their citizenship rights restored," Bowie says, "the judge can issue an opinion that could say something like, 'We restore your gun rights under Tennessee law, any federal statutes notwithstanding.' And then it's totally possible that the Elections Division could say, 'OK, that's good enough.' It's just an open question what they'll do."
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You’re either paid your debt or you haven’t. This is all bullshit.
Okay. You haven't. So you don't get to vote or own a gun.
Tax us, regulate us, set us free!
15%, where are these people getting their weed? Over 20% is pretty standard these days. Well into the 30s isn't too unusual.
I suppose it makes it easy to get idiotically stoned, but it's also nice if you don't want to smoke a ton.
So if you've lost your gun rights and yer voting rights... Can ye then EARN MONEY and NOT be taxed on it? Or are we talking "taxation without representation" here? Seems to me, we had a REVOLUTION way back when, over this kind of crap!!!
But what does this have to do with Trump?
Hmm, I could go along with only gun owners having the right to vote.
Yep.
A carry permit is the only acceptable form if ID to vote.
See how fast the democrat heads explode.
After all, it is common sense to get a permit for a right guaranteed by the US Constitution.
How about those of us in states that don't require such nonsense?
Great idea. That would help ensure a permanent Democratic majority: "36% of whites report that they are gun owners, about a quarter of blacks (24%) and 15% of Hispanics say they own a gun." Do the math.
And you assume the gun-owning portions of those demographic groups are Democrats? I think you need math help.
He needs to be taught how to not be racist.
What a fvckin self-own
He may have shot himself in the foot.
If he were allowed to own a gun.
Not all gun owners have "permits". Think it through.
How about someone just showing up and brandishing an unlicensed gun as voter id?
Shouldn’t need a permit for a right. Someday soon you will need a permit to speak. A permit to post online.
"A permit to post online."
Vote for Nikki!
What, exactly, is an unlicensed gun?
A gun that failed the bar exam?
Tennessee, which imposes notoriously demanding requirements on residents with felony records seeking restoration of their voting rights,
I don't see any compelling reason why ex-felons should ever be able to vote again.
Well let’s just imagine some citizens get a little upset at perceived injustice. Let’s say they protest, perhaps at the Capital. Maybe things get out of hand, there’s some broken windows, there’s some trespassing. Now say the powers that be start stacking felony charges. Easy way for the state to disable potential opponents of tyranny.
Easy way for the state to disable potential opponents of tyranny.
No, not at all. J6 protesters were legitimately convicted of crimes. If they hadn't trespassed in the capitol, they wouldn't have been convicted.
Trespassed or invited in?
And they were convicted without access to the video evidence in a district that strongly opposed the protest.
Also, many were imprisoned and not even charged for years after the event. So you've spent 2 years in Federal Prison, and are offered a deal or you can take your chances on a life sentence with an unfriendly jury (or Obama judge) with the full weight of the DOJ and its resources against you. How do you plead?
Trespassed or invited in?
They clearly trespassed.
And they were convicted without access to the video evidence in a district that strongly opposed the protest.
It is simultaneously true that they are actually guilty of a felony and that the legal system treated them unfairly.
Trespassing, with no other crime committed, should never be considered a felony.
But that opens up a whole new argument of "over felony-izing" minor crimes.
P.S. The Bill of Rights, nor any other part of the constitution, enumerates a right to vote. In fact it contains several restrictions, some of which required amendments to alter.
Trespassing, with no other crime committed, should never be considered a felony.
You mean another crime like disrupting a session of Congress?
Funny, I don't see any compelling reason why ex-felons shouldn't ever be able to vote again.
I certainly can: a democracy can only function if people make political choices that are reasonably civic-minded and not selfish. Felons have demonstrated that they fail on both counts, and that personality defect isn't going away in most cases.
You might have a point, if the rest of the electorate wasn’t also victim to that character flaw.
"A democracy can only function if people make political choices that are reasonably civic-minded and not selfish."
The examples of non-felons making entirely self-interested/non-civic-minded decisions at the ballot are legion. One of America's major political parties openly appeals to its voting base by promising free stuff to less-productive members of society by taking more money from more-productive members of society. Both political parties appeal to special interest groups by promising kickbacks and corporate welfare, and get donations and votes based off these appeals.
The examples of non-felons making entirely self-interested/non-civic-minded decisions at the ballot are legion.
"I was dieting, but I've already had one glazed jelly donut, so I might as well have three more!"
In any case, I think that the franchise should be restricted further. Nevertheless, excluding ex-felons is a good place to start.
Repeal the 26th amendment, and make 25 the minimum age to vote.
That's when science says the average brain is fully developed.
If those are the standards, felons should be the least of your worries. As long as government is largely about handing out money in selective ways, voting is going to be largely based on selfishness and felons are an insignificant contributor to that.
There's also the problem of overcriminalization. How sure are you that you haven't committed some obscure felony offense?
As long as government is largely about handing out money in selective ways, voting is going to be largely based on selfishness and felons are an insignificant contributor to that.
About 10-15% of the US population have a felony conviction, and most of those people are poor and dependent on government handouts. I think that is a significant contributor.
And I think there is a good case to be made that people who make the choice to receive government handouts should not be allowed to vote either.
There’s also the problem of overcriminalization. How sure are you that you haven’t committed some obscure felony offense?
We're talking about the ability of ex-felons to vote, not of people who may have accidentally broken some obscure law. It takes a lot of anti-social behavior to actually get convicted of a felony in the US.
And I think there is a good case to be made that people who make the choice to receive government handouts should not be allowed to vote either.
That seems better targeted at the real problem.
"It takes a lot of anti-social behavior to actually get convicted of a felony in the US."
You should look up what some states consider a felony.
In California, passing a bad check is one.
You should look up what some states consider a felony.
In California, passing a bad check is one.
It is in most of the country. And it should be. Don't write bad checks!
Wrong place
Seems like something Democrats would get behind.
Only for those who distribute misinformation about COVID or the election.
Some states forbid owning a gun if you smoke the devil's weed. Do those people lose the right to vote?
Like potheads could be bothered to get off their asses and go to the polls.
They don't have to. Democrats hand deliver multiple mail in ballots to them, help them fill them in and then hand deliver them to the Polls.
Or skip the technicalities, and fill them out and sign them, without the real voter even knowing who they supposedly voted for.
That's why so many LieCheatSteal party run states, eliminated or weakened, signature verification.
I don't really have a problem with this. If you can't be trusted to own a gun you can't be trusted to vote.
Ideally though, if you can't be trusted to own a gun, you should probably still be in jail. Otherwise, if they've done their sentence, give them back their rights.
A vote isn't something you "earn" once you serve your time, you should be allowed to vote again. It's pathetic what these GQP assholes get away with now that there is no Supreme Court worth a damn to stand up for individual rights over the police state.
And a right to bear arms shall not be infringed under any circumstance, but at the very least you should get it back after your sentence is complete. Self-defense is a far more valid universal human right than the ability to outsource the task and moral guilt of screwing over your neighbors to the government via the ballot box.
A vote isn’t something you “earn” once you serve your time, you should be allowed to vote again.
Why? Why should anybody who has broken the law in such a serious way that they were imprisoned for an extended period of time ever be trusted with the vote again?
If you can’t be trusted to own a gun you can’t be trusted to vote.
Why?
According to Liberals, NOBODY can be trusted with a gun, unless they approve of them. What's that going to do for voter rights?
"If they’ve done their sentence, give them back their rights."
Nuff said.
Tennessee is an uneducated, bigoted, economically inadequate, superstitious, dysfunction, backwater state. Those bigots, traitors, and losers should not have been permitted to resume statehood after the Civil War. An unincorporated territory would have been the proper decision.
And the fastest growing state in the Union, thanks to not having an income tax.
So, St. Abraham, should have taken actions, that killed more than 600,000 Americans, to bring the Confederate States back into the union, and then not let them be part of it?
Do the nurses at your mental hospital know you have access to the internet?
Lol more retarded laws coming out of Tennessee. Not a shocker, I used to live there and got away as soon as I could.
Maybe that's one way to restore your voting/gun rights--move to another state.
So let me get this straight. Tennessee is 9-10% ex-cons, and the good people of Tennessee are more or less united around the idea that foxes shouldn't get a say when it comes to running the henhouse, and they've made the determination of whether one is or isn't a fox based on the fox proving that he can be trusted not to do foxlike things in the henhouse.
And this is a problem because?
Any felony" falls into that category, so it includes drug law violations and other nonviolent offenses as well as violent crimes.
GOOD. Nobody gives a damn what the drug-addled degenerate population has to say about anything either.
Vices aren't crimes. No one should be imprisoned for his or her private choices that don't harm others, much less lose their basic civil rights over it.
Vices aren’t crimes. No one should be imprisoned for his or her private choices that don’t harm others,
I agree: you shouldn't be imprisoned for taking drugs. Instead, if you take drugs, you should simply be kicked out of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and unemployment insurance.
That's a reasonable compromise.
What do you care? Just go get high and it won't, like, even matter to you anymore or whatever, man. You can just chill and like, enjoy it, man.
Also, the drug trade - like the pornography trade - harms millions of people. Just because you choose to limit the definition of "harm" to your immediate presence and surroundings doesn't mean your participation in that industry isn't contributing to the harm it causes.
Well, that's one way of looking at it.
It's not a very libertarian way of looking at it, but hey, this isn't a libertarian forum or anything...
Well, that’s one way of looking at it. It’s not a very libertarian way of looking at it, but hey, this isn’t a libertarian forum or anything…
I'm not familiar with any libertarian principle that requires people to be governed by the votes of ex-felons.
To the contrary, in a libertarian society, people would have the ability to exclude ex-felons from their lives entirely.
Hint: it's related to the "drug law violations" part.
(Feel free to "do your own research".)
Hint: it’s related to the “drug law violations” part.
Libertarianism just says that there should be no laws regulating what you put into your body, not that it is consequence free.
In a functioning libertarian society, drug users would be kicked out of most insurance plans and organizations and would certainly not get to vote in many organizations they are part of.
(Feel free to “do your own research”.)
Feel free to use your head... for a change.
Speak for yourself.
Lysander Spooner is rolling over in his private postal service grave somewhere.
He chose the ballot as the next best alternative to the bullet, but now both options can be denied.
We do enjoy a good Lysander Spooner reference
Fuck. That. Shit.
I agree that if you have completed your sentence your rights should be restored - all of them. However, if you are on parole, or received early release for good behavior, I have no problem with suspension of rights until the original sentence is completed.
If the laws are too strict on drug possession, change the bloody law - like they've done in several states.
Part of the sentence *is* "You no longer get to vote." That doesn't end.
Felons as a general rule are in favor of gun control.
Makes it easier to rob their next victim
Once a sentence has been completed, rights should be restored, Further, there should be no linkage between rights - no, "if you can't/won't exercise this right, you're not allowed to exercise that right".
If someone is regarded as sufficiently dangerous that they shouldn't be allowed to carry a gun, that should be reflected in the sentence and conditions of parole.
There is not even such a consideration of dangerousness wrt voting.
And as a matter of principle, the default position should be that the state should maximise the number of citizens voting, and remove obstacles to it. (The issue of the trade-off between making voting easy and increasing voter fraud arises later.)
Once a sentence has been completed, rights should be restored
Yeah, there is something fundamentally wrong with the belief that just because you breathe, you have a "right" to vote on how other people live.
I'm happy with felons not owning guns nor having the right to vote. These are people who have shown themselves to be incapable of upholding the obligations inherent in living within a free society.
How sure are you that you haven't committed any felonies?
Committing a felony doesn't make you a felon; only being convicted of a felony makes you a felon.
Right, but the tools are there to be weaponized for political purposes.
Right, but the tools are there to be weaponized for political purposes.
Convicting large numbers of people of felonies for the purpose of preventing them from voting is not a sensible strategy: it's far too costly and too slow, and it would result in a massive political backlash. Targeted political prosecutions are used to demoralize and intimidate prominent individuals, not to change statistics.
Given how shoddy US election procedures are, it would be much easier simply to manipulate vote counts.
Thank you to all of our right-wing colleagues here for confirming what I have been saying for a while now:
the right tends to view liberty as a privilege that only the morally worthy deserve to have.
the right tends to view liberty as a privilege that only the morally worthy deserve to have.
Being able to impose your will on others via voting is not part of "liberty".
That is, the right wants small government and subsidiarity, period.
But since the progressive era, we have been living under a government with nearly unchecked and unlimited powers, a tyranny of the majority, and you have no intrinsic right to be a tyrant.
And unarmed trespassers on public property should be shot in the face
What does voting have to do with liberty? Voting is a privilege, not a right.
"As there is a degree of depravity in mankind which requires a certain degree of circumspection and distrust, so there are other qualities in human nature which justify a certain portion of esteem and confidence. Republican government presupposes the existence of these qualities in a higher degree than any other form. Were the pictures which have been drawn by the political jealousy of some among us faithful likenesses of the human character, the inference would be, that there is not sufficient virtue among men for self-government; and that nothing less than the chains of despotism can restrain them from destroying and devouring one another."
-Madison, Federalist #55
Or, if you prefer:
"Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious People. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."
-Adams
You morons have it backwards. There needs to be a whole hell of a lot more disenfranchisement. A democracy is only as good as it’s electorate and the evidence is in: we suck. What is needed is some form of reasonable restriction on who can vote while still providing an opportunity for all to earn that privilege.
and the evidence is in: we suck.
That's what the political aristocracy both banks on and panders to. We get the government we ask for. Good and hard.