Nebraska Supreme Court to Rule on Felon Voting
Nebraska Supreme Court to Rule on Felon Voting
Nebraska Supreme Court to Rule on Felon Voting
News summary

In November, voters in 10 states, including Nebraska, will decide on key abortion measures, reflecting ongoing national debates post the 2022 Supreme Court decision. Nebraska is unique with two conflicting amendments: one enforcing a 12-week abortion limit and another allowing abortions until fetal viability. Meanwhile, Nebraska's Attorney General Mike Hilgers has challenged recent laws allowing felons to vote immediately after sentence completion, calling them unconstitutional. This has left over 7,000 potential voters in legal limbo, awaiting a ruling from the Nebraska Supreme Court. The court's decision is crucial with the upcoming elections, potentially impacting voting rights and electoral outcomes.

Story Coverage
Nebraska's Supreme Court to decide if those with felony convictions can vote in November
Voting Rights for Nebraska Felons in Flux as Election Day Approaches
Nebraska Will Have Dueling Abortion Amendments on the November Ballot
Nebraska attorney general trying to toss laws letting felons vote after release
Bias Distribution
50% Left
Information Sources
0319a078-c5a7-4188-95f2-60cb4be32cc6cad3d7a8-9ce2-4060-a6fb-3964c8b500898f76b506-b4ea-4d97-9e25-107ba95ef15b
Left 50%
Right 25%
Coverage Details
Total News Sources
4
Left
2
Center
0
Right
1
Unrated
1
Last Updated
19 days ago
Bias Distribution
50% Left
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Story Coverage
Nebraska's Supreme Court to decide if those with felony convictions can vote in November
Voting Rights for Nebraska Felons in Flux as Election Day Approaches
Nebraska Will Have Dueling Abortion Amendments on the November Ballot
Nebraska attorney general trying to toss laws letting felons vote after release
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