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NE ACLU Filing Lawsuit for Felony Voting Rights

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According to the Associated Press, the American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska has filed a lawsuit challenging top election officialsโ€™ defiance of state laws that restore the voting rights of those whoโ€™ve ever been convicted of a felony.

The ACLU filed the lawsuit Monday on behalf of three Nebraska residents who would be denied the right to vote under a directive from Secretary of State Bob Evnen, who recently ordered county election officials to not allow those with felony convictions to register to vote in Novemberโ€™s presidential election.

Evnen based his decision on a July 17 opinion by the state attorney general that said a law passed earlier this year to immediately restore the voting rights of people whoโ€™ve finished serving their felony convictions violates the state constitutionโ€™s separation of powers. The opinion also found unconstitutional a 2005 law that restored the voting rights of people with felony convictions two years after they finished all the terms of their sentences.

โ€œThis opinion is non-binding and cannot overturn a law passed by the Nebraska Legislature,โ€ the ACLU said in a statement.

Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgersโ€™ opinion said only the state Board of Pardons can restore the voting rights of people with felony convictions through pardons, which are exceedingly rare in Nebraska.

Evnen sought the opinion from Hilgers. Evnen and Hilgers, along with Gov. Jim Pillen, make up the three-member Board of Pardons. All three are Republican.

Evnenโ€™s office said it had not been served with the lawsuit Monday morning and couldnโ€™t comment on it before reading it. Earlier in the month, he defended his actions, saying he believes the opinion was โ€œextensively researched.โ€

With the election fewer than 100 days out, the ACLU filed the lawsuit directly with the Nebraska Supreme Court โ€œgiven the nature and urgency of the case.โ€

At least 7,000 Nebraskans could be kept from voting in November under Evnenโ€™s actions, according to the Nebraskaโ€™s Voting Rights Restoration Coalition.

Evnen has denied that the opinion and his order to stop registering people convicted of felonies seems geared to disenfranchise a segment of voters only months ahead of a tight election, saying his actions arenโ€™t โ€œgeared to do anything other than follow the Nebraska Constitution.โ€