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felony conviction

Three years after making camping a felony, Tennessee lawmakers add more homelessness penalties

Cynthia Abrams

April 25, 2025

Nashville campsite
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In 2022, Tennessee became the first state to make camping on public land a felony crime. A slate of new legislation will further impact people without stable housing.

Filed Under: Metro, Politics, WPLN News Tagged With: 114th Tennessee General Assembly, Appalachia + Mid-South Newsroom, felony conviction, homeless, homelessness, metro, Metro Homelessness Commission, state legislature, Tennessee Legislature, tennessee state legislature, unhoused

Tennessee’s voter restoration process is now before a federal court

Marianna Bacallao

January 16, 2025

A federal appeals court will soon decide on the future of voting restoration in Tennessee. Here’s what arguments it heard.

Filed Under: Politics, Race & Equity, WPLN News Tagged With: Attorney General, Campaign Legal Center, disenfranchisement, felons, felony conviction, Free Hearts, NAACP, Tennessee State Election Commission, voter registration in Tennessee, Voters, voting, voting rights

Disenfranchised Tennesseans will have their votes counted in the 2024 election, officials say

Marianna Bacallao

November 22, 2024

The votes of six formerly incarcerated Tennesseans will be counted in the 2024 election, despite a state election policy that disqualifies them from voting. The decision from Tennessee’s coordinator of elections comes as the state continues to oppose restoring the voting rights of Tennesseans with certain felony convictions.

Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Politics, WPLN News Tagged With: Attorney General, disenfranchisement, Elections 2024, felony conviction, Jonathan Skrmetti, Mark Goins, Tennessee State Election Commission, voter registration in Tennessee, Voters, voting, voting rights

Tennessee’s motion to stop formerly incarcerated Tennesseans from voting fails a second time. The state isn’t giving up.

Marianna Bacallao

November 18, 2024

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A Nashville judge has maintained that disenfranchised Tennesseans can restore their voting rights, counter to a state election rule.

Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Politics, WPLN News Tagged With: Attorney General, disenfranchisement, Elections 2024, felony conviction, Free Hearts, Tennessee State Election Commission, voter registration in Tennessee, Voters, voting, voting rights

Disenfranchised Tennesseans can vote in this election, Nashville judge rules

Marianna Bacallao

November 4, 2024

Monday’s ruling has opened the door for disenfranchised Tennesseans to cast a ballot, but the final decision still rests in the state election commission’s hands.

Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Election in Depth 2024, Election Live Blog 2024, Politics, Race & Equity, WPLN News Tagged With: Attorney General, disenfranchisement, Elections 2024, felony conviction, Free Hearts, Jonathan Skrmetti, Tennessee State Election Commission, voter registration in Tennessee, Voters, voting, voting rights

A Nashville judge restored her voting rights. Then the state stepped in.

Marianna Bacallao

October 28, 2024

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A Nashville judge will soon decide if a group of disenfranchised voters can cast a ballot in this election. The order could pave the way for more people to restore their voting rights.

Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Politics, Race & Equity, WPLN News Tagged With: disenfranchisement, Elections 2024, felony conviction, Free Hearts, voter registration in Tennessee, Voters, voting, voting rights

Tennessee elections aren’t competitive. That’s not the only reason voter turnout is so low.

Marianna Bacallao

October 8, 2024

Tennessee is in the bottom five states when it comes to voter turnout. A new report finds that state policy makes voting harder for communities of color and disabled voters.

Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Politics, WPLN News Tagged With: disenfranchisement, Elections 2024, felons, felony conviction, voter registration in Tennessee, Voters, voting, voting rights

Tennessee’s latest voting regulations spark debate about election integrity and ballot access

Char Daston

October 5, 2024

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Over the last few years, the Tennessee legislature and state courts have created stringent new rules for people with felony records who want regain their voting rights, nonprofits that run voter registration drives, and people who want to vote in a party primary they’re not already a part of.

Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Politics, WPLN News Tagged With: Elections 2024, felony conviction, primary elections, voter registration in Tennessee, voting rights

Nashville judge rules against a controversial Tennessee voting restriction

Marianna Bacallao

September 9, 2024

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A Nashville judge has restored the voting rights of four people in Davidson County, dissenting from a contentious state requirement.

Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Politics, WPLN News Tagged With: Campaign Legal Center, disenfranchisement, Elections 2024, felons, felony conviction, Free Hearts, voter registration in Tennessee, Voters, voting, voting rights

The Tennessee Supreme Court is making it tougher for former felons who moved from another state to vote

Blaise Gainey

July 5, 2023

The Tennessee Supreme Court has made it tougher for former felons who moved to the state to vote.

Filed Under: Politics, WPLN News Tagged With: disenfranchisement, felony conviction, voting rights

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