
Former president Donald Trump arrives at Trump Tower in New York on Monday, April 3, 2023. Trump is expected to be booked and arraigned on Tuesday on charges arising from hush money payments during his 2016 campaign | Credit | Bryan Woolston/AP
Now that a New York jury has convicted former President Donald Trump of all 34 felony charges of falsifying business records, the next obvious question is: Can a convicted felon run for president? Definitely.
A further question is more
complicated: Could Trump, as a felon, vote for himself? Probably.
Starting with the easy question …
Can a convict run for president?
The US Constitution lays out just
three requirements for presidential candidates. They must:
- Be a natural born citizen.
- Be at least 35 years old.
- Have been a US resident for at least 14 years.
Trump meets all three requirements.
There is, arguably, another criterion laid out in the 14th Amendment, where it
states that no one who has previously taken an oath of office who engages in
insurrection can be an officer of the US. But the US Supreme Court ruled earlier this year that
Congress would have to pass a special law invoking this prohibition. That’s not
happening any time soon.
Judge Juan Merchan has scheduled
Trump’s sentencing for July 11, which happens to be four days before the start
of the Republican National Convention that is scheduled to take place in
Milwaukee.
It is technically possible, although
perhaps unlikely for a first-time offender, that Trump could be sentenced to
prison time.
CNN senior legal analyst Elie Honig
said most Class E felony convictions, the least serious type of felony in New
York, result in non-prison sentences – often a combination of probation, fines
and community service.
As a former president, Trump enjoys
lifetime Secret Service protection and he will continue to get protection
wherever he is, according to Anthony Guglielmi, chief of communications for the
Secret Service.
“Today’s outcome has no bearing on the
manner in which the United States Secret Service carries out its protective
mission. Our security measures will proceed unchanged,” Guglielmi said in a
statement to CNN.
There is also precedent for
presidential campaigns, albeit unsuccessful ones, being mounted from prison
cells.
Eugene Debs, the Socialist
leader, conducted his 1920 presidential campaign from federal prison in
Atlanta, where he was serving a 10-year sentence for sedition. He had
encouraged Americans to oppose the draft in World War I.
The Supreme Court, in that case, had
affirmed his conviction, arguing he was convicted not for opposing the draft
but for encouraging people not to comply with it. The decision keeping Debs in
jail was written by then-Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes just a few months before
Holmes did a famous about-face on
free speech that put the US on course for the way we view the First Amendment
today.
Thomas Doherty, an American studies
professor at Brandeis University, wrote last year about
Debs, noting that he remained in prison as votes were cast and counted – he got
nearly a million, more than 3% of the vote. Even after the Sedition Act was
repealed, Debs was kept in prison. Then-President Woodrow Wilson refused to
issue a pardon. Wilson’s successor and Debs’ rival in 1920, Warren G. Harding,
later commuted Debs’ sentence in 1921.
And now to the more difficult question
…
Can a convicted felon vote?
It depends.
Trump’s right to vote in Florida in
November’s election will depend on whether he is sentenced to a term in prison
and if he has finished serving that prison sentence by the time of the
election.
Each state makes its own rules.
Vermont and Maine allow felons to vote from prison. There has been movement in
multiple states toward allowing felons on parole to cast ballots.
Trump is now a Florida resident – and
Florida voters, in 2018, overwhelmingly backed a referendum to reenfranchise convicted felons. But
Republican lawmakers who control the state’s government first delayed and then
qualified the reenfranchisement by requiring that felons must pay all fines and
fees associated with their sentence.
I talked to Neil Volz, deputy director
of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, an organization that works to help
reenfranchise formerly incarcerated people. He predicted Trump will have little
problem voting since Florida actually defers to the jurisdiction of
a felony conviction as to whether a felon can vote. In New York, after a law passed in 2021, any
convicted felon who is not incarcerated is eligible to register to vote.
Read more from the Campaign Legal Center.
Even if the judge ultimately tried to
give Trump prison time, it is highly unlikely that Trump’s right to appeal his
conviction would be exhausted before Election Day. If, somehow, Trump was
convicted in one of the two federal criminal cases against him before
Election Day, that might be another story.
The are other problems for many
post-incarceration felons in Florida, as CNN has reported previously, although they would
not apply to Trump. For starters, there is no clearinghouse of data about what
fees are required. It has led to confusion and kept many people from voting.
“There are still a lot of people who
are confused about their eligibility, and that’s why we continue to work with
the state and the election professionals to fix the system,” Volz told me.
“Because people need to know whether they’re eligible or not on the front end
of the process.”
Volz said his group is making progress
with the state to make it much easier for people to confirm their eligibility