Kennedy, who occasionally moonlights teaching constitutional
law at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, made that remark incident to
a feud over which felons may vote between GOP Sec. of State Kyle Ardoin
(currently standing for his current job on Dec. 8) and Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards. His
statement came under question in a column
by the Baton Rouge Advocate’s Mark Ballard
(I am contracted to write a weekly opinion column for The Advocate).
Actually, voting is one those unenumerated rights
protected under the Ninth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The Constitution
underlines voting as a right, rather than a privilege, in the 15th Amendment,
which allows African Americans to vote; the 19th Amendment, which allows women
to vote; the 23rd Amendment, which includes the District of Columbia in the
electoral college; the 24th Amendment that prohibits poll taxes and other
hurdles to registration; and the 26th Amendment that allows 18-year-olds the
right to vote.
Problem is, constitutional scholars essentially back
none of what he cites as corroboration of voting as a right. To begin with, no
jurisprudence supports the notion that a “right” vote exists within the Ninth
Amendment, which reads “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain
rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the
people.”
Originally, the Ninth Amendment came as a response
to the remainder of the original Bill of Rights as a measure indicating, just because
other amendments listed rights, that didn’t make the listing comprehensive. But
at the same time, neither did it empower the judiciary to create rights out of
thin air, which Ballard (joining a long list advocates stumping for imagined rights
in this fashion) attempts to do. Properly
conceived (and especially so when understanding its original language that
forbade the federal government from enlarging its own power), it was intended
to be nothing more than a rule of construction or a guide for understanding how
the Constitution was meant to be interpreted.
As for the other amendments listed, these don’t create
a right to vote for various groups but instead prevent government (both federal
and state through the Fourteenth Amendment, which actually has the strongest
claim to specifying a “right” to vote) from restricting the use of suspect
categories and practices where it legislates on who may vote.
For the fact is, jurisprudence
is that the right to vote in state elections isn’t at all guaranteed. States
may restrict voting in any number of ways as long as it can demonstrate a “compelling”
state interest by doing so. Until these amendments came about, they had
complete discretion in picking and choosing, although the equal protection doctrine
that presently governs these kinds of cases didn’t develop until the 20th
century. At its end, the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed
that “[t]he individual citizen has no federal constitutional right to vote for
electors for the President of the United States.”
Even individuals
and groups
who share Ballard’s leftist sympathies admit this. Thus, many liberals back an
effort to amend the Constitution precisely to write in an affirmative right to vote.
Keep in mind that a “right” exists inalienably (although it may be subject to
the whims of interpretation as to its extension) while a “privilege” comes
about when government may constrain its exercise to some degree.
Therefore, voting takes on more of a character of “privilege”
than “right.” Perhaps best exemplifying this, people who commit a
felony and serve under an order of imprisonment in Louisiana cannot vote
(although in a few months, courtesy
of a recently-passed law, even those still under such an order not in
prison after five years will regain that capacity). The enjoy the privilege of
voting, in essence, during good behavior.
As another example of how voting definitely is not
inalienable, states constitutionally may prohibit people from voting on the basis
of mental incompetence. Louisiana
has some of the most restrictive requirements that may do this even though
people under judicially-declared guardianship (the state’s standard) may have a
good understanding of how elections work and of the issues at stake in federal,
state, and local elections.
In short, unless amending the Constitution to
change this, Kennedy is right and Ballard is wrong.
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