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In the 1790s the Vermont Legislature tried to outlaw inmate voting, but it was overruled in 1799 by the Council of Censors, a now-defunct fourth branch of government that met every seven years to decide constitutional questions, said Montpelier attorney Paul Gillies. The most recent effort to outlaw prison voting in Vermont came in the early 1980s. The office of then-Secretary of State Jim Douglas
-- he is now governor -- trotted out the 1799 precedent and quashed the idea, said Gillies, who served as Douglas' deputy secretary of state. "It's really an abomination that felons are allowed to vote," said Rob Roper, the chairman of the Vermont Republican Party. "Who are they going to vote for? The people who are going to spend more money on prisons and who are going to let them out early so they can commit more crimes?" No one tracks how many Vermont inmates cast ballots. Groups have conducted registration drives at some prisons. Several years ago, the nonprofit group Vermont Protection and Advocacy received a grant to help people with disabilities register to vote. The group has worked with disabled inmates as well as those without disabilities, said advocate Tina Wood. This fall, Wood registered 73 inmates at the Northern State Correctional Facility in Newport and has been working in other facilities, too. "I've seen a huge increase in the number of inmates who wanted to vote over two years ago or four years ago," Wood said. Earlier this year in Maine, the NAACP conducted a voter registration drive of inmates, which drew about 200 participants. While Vermont inmates can vote, political activity inside prisons is forbidden. "It's our job to facilitate," said Carol Collea, an attorney for the Department of Corrections, "but not to campaign."
[Associated
Press;
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