More than 150 years after slaves were freed in the U.S., voters in five states will soon decide whether to close loopholes that led to the proliferation of a different form of slavery — forced labor by people convicted of certain crimes, reported The Associated Press.
None of the proposals would force immediate changes
inside the states’ prisons, though they could lead to legal challenges related
to how they use prison labor, a lasting imprint of slavery’s legacy on the
entire United States.
The effort is part of a
national push to amend the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that banned
enslavement or involuntary servitude except as a form of criminal punishment.
That exception has long permitted the exploitation of labor by convicted
felons.
“The idea that you could ever finish the sentence
‘slavery’s okay when ... ’ has to rip out your soul, and I think it’s what
makes this a fight that ignores political lines and brings us together, because
it feels so clear,” said Bianca Tylek, executive director of Worth Rises, a
criminal justice advocacy group pushing to remove the amendment’s convict labor
clause.
Nearly 20 states have constitutions that include
language permitting slavery and involuntary servitude as criminal punishments.
In 2018, Colorado was the first to remove the language from its founding
frameworks by ballot measure, followed by Nebraska and Utah two years later.
This November, versions of the question go before
voters in Alabama, Louisiana, Oregon, Tennessee and Vermont.
Sen. Raumesh Akbari, a Democrat from Memphis, was
shocked when a fellow lawmaker told her about the slavery exception in the
Tennessee Constitution and immediately began working to replace the language.
“When I found out that this exception existed, I
thought, ‘We have got to fix this and we’ve got to fix this right away,’” she
said. “Our constitution should reflect the values and the beliefs of our
state.”
Constitutions require lengthy and technically tricky
steps before they can be tweaked. Akbari first proposed changes in 2019; the
GOP-dominant General Assembly then had to pass the changes by a majority vote
in one two-year legislative period and then pass it again with at least
two-thirds approval in the next. The amendment could then go on the ballot in
the year of the next gubernatorial election.
Akbari also had to work with the state Department of
Correction to ensure that inmate labor wouldn’t be prohibited under her
proposal.
The proposed language going before Tennessean voters
more clearly distinguishes between the two: “Slavery and involuntary servitude
are forever prohibited. Nothing in this section shall prohibit an inmate from
working when the inmate has been duly convicted of a crime.”
“We understand that those who are incarcerated
cannot be forced to work without pay, but we should not create a situation
where they won’t be able to work at all,” Akbari said.
Similar concerns over the financial impact of prison
labor led California’s Democratic-led Legislature to reject an amendment
eliminating indentured servitude as a possible punishment for crime after Gov.
Gavin Newsom’s administration predicted it could require the state to pay billions
of dollars at minimum wage to prison inmates.
Scrutiny over prison labor has existed for decades,
but the 13th Amendment’s loophole in particular encouraged former
Confederate states after the Civil War to devise new ways to maintain
the dynamics of slavery. They used restrictive
measures, known as the “Black codes” because they nearly always
targeted Black people, to criminalize benign interactions such as talking too
loudly or not yielding on the sidewalk. Those targeted would end up in custody
for minor actions, effectively enslaving them again.
Fast-forward to today: Many incarcerated workers
make pennies on the dollar, which isn’t expected to change if the proposals
succeed. Inmates who refuse to work may be denied phone calls or visits with
family, punished with solitary confinement and even be denied parole.
Alabama is asking voters to delete all racist
language from its constitution and to remove and replace a section on convict
labor that’s similar to what Tennessee has had in its constitution.
Vermont often boasts of being the first state in the
nation to ban slavery in 1777, but its constitution still allows involuntary
servitude in a handful of circumstances. Its proposed change would replace the
current exception clause with language saying ”slavery and indentured servitude
in any form are prohibited.”
Oregon’s proposed change repeals its exception
clause while adding language allowing a court or probation or parole agency to
order alternatives to incarceration as part of sentencing.
Louisiana is the only state so far to have its
proposed amendment draw organized opposition, over concerns that the
replacement language may make matters worse. Even one of its original sponsors
has second thoughts — Democratic Rep. Edmond Jordan told The Times-Picayune/The
New Orleans Advocate last week that he’s urging voters to reject it.
The nonprofit Council for a Better Louisiana warned
that the wording could technically permit slavery again, as well as continue
involuntary servitude.
Louisiana’s Constitution now says: “Slavery and
involuntary servitude are prohibited, except in the latter case as punishment
for a crime.” The amendment would change that to: “Slavery and involuntary
servitude are prohibited, (but this) does not apply to the otherwise lawful
administration of criminal justice.”
“This amendment is an example of why it is so
important to get the language right when presenting constitutional amendments
to voters,” the nonprofit group said in a statement urging voters to choose
“No” and lawmakers to try again, pointing to Tennessee’s ballot language as a
possible template.
Supporters of the amendment say such criticisms are
part of a campaign to keep exception clauses in place.
“If this doesn’t pass, it will be used as a weapon
against us,” said Max Parthas, state operations director for the Abolish
Slavery National Network.
The question stands as a reminder of how slavery
continues to bedevil Americans, and Parthas says that’s reason enough to vote
yes.
“We’ve never seen a single day in the United States
where slavery was not legal,” he said. “We want to see what that looks like and
I think that’s worth it.”
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