In the latest court ruling with 2024 election implications, thousands of Nebraskans who have completed their felony sentences can now vote in the red state. That’s after the state’s top court on Wednesday ordered election officials to permit such voting over Republican objection.
Earlier this year, a bipartisan group of lawmakers passed legislation to let people with felony convictions vote after they have finished their sentences. That built on a 2005 law that made people wait two years.
But just before the law took effect, Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers, a Republican, said that both laws were unconstitutional, arguing that only the state pardons board had the authority to restore voting rights. On that board sit Hilgers, Republican Secretary of State Bob Evnen and the state’s Republican governor, Jim Pillen, who didn’t veto the new law but expressed constitutional concerns and encouraged Hilgers and Evnen to “promptly” look into it. Backed by Hilgers’ legal opinion, Evnen told election officials not to register people with felony convictions if they hadn’t been pardoned.
Yet the Republicans couldn’t convince enough justices on the state top court. “Because the requisite number of judges have not found that the statutory amendments are unconstitutional, we issue a peremptory writ of mandamus directing the Secretary and the election commissioners to implement the statutory amendments immediately,” the court said.








