Testimony in Support for HB 2592, HB 2834, and HB 2787 – Restoration of Voting Rights

February 2, 2026

To: Chairman Don Mayhew and Members of the Corrections and Public Institutions Committee From: Gwen Smith-Moore, Empower Missouri 

RE: Support for HB 2592 & HB 2834 and Restoring Voting Rights 

Empower Missouri has been committed for over 120 years to improving the quality of life for all Missouri residents through advocacy and policy change. Since our inception, Empower Missouri has focused on the criminal justice system and its impacts. Our Community Justice Coalition consists of community advocates and organizations from across the state who work with those who have been impacted by the criminal justice system. Many coalition members are formerly incarcerated or have currently incarcerated loved ones, and all are connected by a vision for a future without mass incarceration. We support HB 2592, HB 2834, and HB 2787, bills that would restore voting rights to individuals on probation and parole. 

People on parole and probation are your constituents and our neighbors. Each of us has unique insight into our own lives and experiences with Missouri policy that others, including elected officials, simply will never have the chance to experience. When we delay the restoration of voting rights until a term of probation or parole is complete – which can be years – this can mean that individuals who know best what helps and hinders their everyday lives are not always represented in state policymaking. We believe that the majority of our state representatives and senators take seriously the idea that they represent everyone in their district. We also recognize the reality that elected officials pay more attention to voters, and when people’s right to vote is delayed or denied, their preferences and interests won’t be attended to. 

Additionally, if we expect people to reintegrate into our communities successfully, we must also provide them with pathways to meaningful engagement. Engaging in the civic responsibility of voting is a meaningful (re)connection to the greater community. Delaying the restoration of an individual’s voting rights puts up barriers, disenfranchises, and encourages isolation instead of what is needed, which is moving toward what it is to be a flourishing member of the community. A single vote does not change outcomes, but it is an important part of making a person feel like a contributing part of the whole, counting as a full citizen. 

Voting rights restoration is also a common sense public safety measure. States where individuals retain their right to vote while on supervision see 10% lower recidivism rates than states without voting restoration. Voting is a pro-social activity associated with a lower chance of offending. Missouri is one of fifteen states where people with a felony conviction lose their voting rights through incarceration and while on parole and/or probation. Empower Missouri urges this committee to join the other states that have taken steps to restore voting rights immediately after incarceration and vote do-pass for these bills. Thank you for your time and consideration.

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