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Senate Bill Would Let Felons Run For Office In Texas Only If They've Been Pardoned

Lewis Conway Jr. holds a press conference before filing to run for City Council last July.
Gabriel C. Pérez
/
KUT
Lewis Conway Jr. holds a press conference before filing to run for City Council last July.

A bill before the Texas Senate would allow felons to seek public office only if they have received a pardon.

Current election code says a candidate who has been convicted of a felony must either be pardoned “or otherwise released from the resulting disabilities” – but it doesn’t define “resulting disabilities.”  Senate Bill 466 would remove that clause.

The legislation — sponsored by state Sen. Pat Fallon, R-Prosper — is in response to a felon who ran for Austin City Council last year.

Lewis Conway Jr.’s eligibility was challenged because of the ambiguous term. He and his lawyers argued that since he had served his sentence, completed his parole and had his voting rights reinstated, he was “released from the resulting disabilities.” The city clerk allowed him to stay on the ballot, but he didn’t win the District 1 seat.

“When are we going to embrace compassion in regards to electoral politics and agree that a precedent has been set?” Conway said in response to the bill. “Why are we not looking at including people in the electoral process as opposed to excluding people?”

Conway said he thinks more people are engaging with the criminal justice system and realizing that punishment isn’t serving the community.

“There’s a hard line of folks who believe that once you have been in prison, that you are no longer human,” he said, “but then there’s a great number of folks who realize that the criminal justice system pervasively impacts people of color - disproportionately.”

Conway is forming a nonprofit to help candidates who have been incarcerated.

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit .

Sangita Menon is a general assignment reporter for KUT. Before switching over to journalism in 2017, she was a circuit designer for a high-tech company in Austin. She has a degree in electrical engineering and computer science from UCLA. Sangita was born in India, grew up in California, lived in Oregon and finally made her way to Texas in 2007. She lives in Austin with her husband and two daughters.