Incarcerated felons don’t have the right to vote in Massachusetts — but they still have the right to try to change that.
Advocates attempting to restore those voting rights kicked off a statewide petition drive Friday by collecting signatures inside Suffolk County jails.
An organization called Healing Our Land — which supports incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people — convened political leaders, advocates and several dozen inmates inside the Suffolk County House of Correction.
They brought with them the petitions that were approved by the state’s attorney general this week in support of a ballot initiative to restore voting rights, and several inmates signed. DeAnza Cook, a professor at The Ohio State University and a Healing Our Land board member, told GBH News that it sends an important signal that incarcerated people “will be the very first ones to have their names on that petition.”
In Massachusetts, people serving time for felonies haven’t been allowed to vote in any elections since 2000, when voters approved a constitutional amendment suspending their rights. If it’s successful, the new initiative would reverse that.
The ballot initiative is likely to take years; for starters, organizers have to collect tens of thousands of signatures from around the state. At least 25% of state lawmakers will have to approve the measure in the next two legislative sessions, then the issue could be put on the 2028 ballot.
Men incarcerated in the state prison in Norfolk participated in drafting the initiative as part of a project called Empowering Descendant Communities to Unlock Democracy.
There are more than 7,000 people in Massachusetts who cannot vote because of their felony convictions, said Pastor Franklin Hobbs, the founder of Healing Our Land.
But people incarcerated on misdemeanors or awaiting trial still have the right to vote. As they collected signatures for the ballot initiative, Healing Our Land and other advocates were also going “from unit to unit” inside the Suffolk County jails, connecting with prisoners and making sure those eligible are able to vote. Some people incarcerated at the Suffolk County House of Correction are eligible to vote in Tuesday’s preliminary election in Boston.
“We’re tracking their process,” Hobbs said. “Filling out a registration form or an absentee ballot application. ‘Did you get your ballot?’ We’re receiving their ballots. We’re saying, ‘Did your ballot get cast?’ We’re following that whole process.”
Elly Kalfus, a volunteer coordinator for the voting rights project, said it’s impossible to know how many potential voters are behind bars in county jails because the secretary of state has not released that data.
But between Nashua Street Jail and Suffolk County House of Correction, she said: “Right now we’ve registered 100 voters for this election. Last year we had more like 300 voters because of the presidential election.”
But Hobbs said it should be the government’s responsibility to make it easy for prisoners to vote.
“We’re trying to institutionalize this,” he said. “This should not be this difficult. Ultimately the secretary of state — it’s his responsibility to make sure that everybody [behind bars] has the same rights that everybody on the outside has.”
State Rep. Russell Holmes, a Democrat who represents Boston neighborhoods including Mattapan, Dorchester and Roslindale, joined Hobbs and the other advocates at the House of Correction Friday.
“As a state, we had for hundreds of years allowed people who were incarcerated to vote — and then we took that away as pretty much a punishment,” he told GBH News afterward, referring to the move in 2000 to suspend rights for people incarcerated for felonies.
Holmes hopes to see the initiative passed. He said he told those serving time that they have to vote if they want politicians to take their issues seriously.
“The most important thing you can do is vote, because we’re going to pay attention to it if you do.” he said. “If you don’t vote, we’re not going to really pay attention.”