Thousands of formerly incarcerated people in Minnesota woke up Saturday morning with a right they lacked the day prior.
, 55,000 individuals who previously were deprived of voting rights now can register to vote, the most significant expansion of that right in Minnesota in a half-century.
The Minnesota Supreme Court ruled last month that the state constitution does not guarantee convicted felons the right to vote. House File 28 passed the Democratic-held Minnesota Senate and House following the court's decision.
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Minnesota extends voting rights for 55,000 felony offendersMinnesotans who are on probation for felony convictions will be allowed to cast a ballot under a new law signed by Gov. Tim Walz.
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