Kelli Jo Griffin v. Paul Pate, in His Official Capacities as the Secretary of State of Iowa, and Denise Fraise, in Her Official Capacities as the County Auditor of Lee County, Iowa , 884 N.W.2d 182 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 15–1661
    Filed June 30, 2016
    KELLI JO GRIFFIN,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    PAUL PATE, In His Official Capacities as the Secretary of State of Iowa,
    and DENISE FRAISE, In Her Official Capacities as the County Auditor of
    Lee County, Iowa,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Arthur E.
    Gamble, Judge.
    Claimant appeals district court ruling holding her drug conviction
    fell within the scope of “infamous crime” as used in article II, section 5 of
    the Iowa Constitution. AFFIRMED.
    Rita Bettis of ACLU of Iowa Foundation, Des Moines, and Julie A.
    Ebenstein and Dale E. Ho of ACLU Foundation, Inc., New York,
    New York, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Jeffrey S. Thompson, Solicitor
    General, Meghan L. Gavin, Assistant Attorney General, and Michael
    Short, Lee County Attorney, for appellee.
    Gary D. Dickey of Dickey & Campbell Law Firm, PLC, Des Moines,
    for amicus curiae Polk County Auditor Jamie Fitzgerald.
    2
    Coty R. Montag, Washington, D.C., John B. Whiston of Clinical
    Law Programs, University of Iowa, Iowa City, until withdrawal, and then
    John S. Allen of Clinical Law Programs, University of Iowa, Iowa City,
    and Christina A. Swarns, Angel S. Harris, and Joshua A. Rosenthal,
    New York, New York, for amicus curiae The NAACP Legal Defense &
    Educational Fund, Inc.
    Alan R. Ostergren, Muscatine County Attorney, for amicus curiae
    Iowa County Attorneys Association.
    Mark     McCormick     of   Belin    McCormick,   P.C.,   Des Moines,
    Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick of Greenberg Traurig, LLP, New York,
    New York, and Myrna Pérez of Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School
    of Law, New York, New York, for amicus curiae The Iowa League of
    Women Voters.
    Gordon E. Allen, Johnston, for amicus curiae Citizens United for
    Rehabilitation of Errants.
    Joseph    C.   Glazebrook   of   Glazebrook,   Moe,   &   Hurd,   LLP,
    Des Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa veterans.
    Kristi L. Harshbarger, West Des Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa
    State Association of Counties.
    3
    CADY, Chief Justice.
    This appeal requires us to decide if the crime of delivery of a
    controlled     substance   is   an   “infamous   crime”   under   the   voter
    disqualification provision of the Iowa Constitution.      The district court
    held the crime is an infamous crime, and a conviction thereof disqualifies
    persons from voting in Iowa. Following the analysis we have used in the
    past to interpret provisions of our constitution, we agree and affirm the
    judgment of the district court.
    The term “infamous crime” was generally recognized to include
    felony crimes at the time our constitution was adopted. This meaning
    has not sufficiently changed or evolved to give rise to a different meaning
    today.     In addition, unlike some past cases when we have interpreted
    provisions of our constitution, the facts and evidence of this case are
    insufficient to justify judicial recognition of a different meaning.
    Constrained, as we must be, by our role in government, we conclude our
    constitution permits persons convicted of a felony to be disqualified from
    voting in Iowa until pardoned or otherwise restored to the rights of
    citizenship. This conclusion is not to say the infamous-crime provision
    of our constitution would not accommodate a different meaning in the
    future. A different meaning, however, is not for us to determine in this
    case.     A new definition will be up to the future evolution of our
    understanding of voter disqualification as a society, revealed through the
    voices of our democracy.
    I. Background and Proceedings.
    Kelli Jo Griffin is an Iowa resident.   She is also a citizen of the
    United States.     She is forty-two years old.   Griffin engaged in criminal
    conduct that resulted in a 2008 conviction for the crime of delivery of
    100 grams or less of cocaine in violation of Iowa Code section
    4
    124.401(1)(c)(2)(b) (2007), a class “C” felony. She was sentenced by the
    district court to a suspended term of incarceration and given five years’
    probation. 1 Griffin successfully discharged her sentence on January 7,
    2013.
    On November 5, 2013, Griffin registered to vote and cast a
    provisional ballot in a municipal election in Montrose, Iowa.                   Denise
    Fraise, the Lee County auditor, subsequently determined Griffin was not
    eligible to vote due to the 2008 felony conviction, and rejected her ballot.
    Griffin was charged and prosecuted with perjury for registering and
    voting in the November 5 election.             She was acquitted of this crime
    following a jury trial.
    On November 7, 2014, Griffin filed a petition in district court
    against the governor of Iowa, the secretary of state of Iowa, and county
    auditor Fraise. The petition asked the court to declare that her felony
    conviction did not disqualify her under the Iowa Constitution from
    voting, and it sought other relief in the form of an injunction and
    mandamus to recognize and protect her right to vote.
    The district court dismissed the governor from the lawsuit, and the
    case proceeded to a summary judgment hearing. The court held Griffin
    had been disqualified from voting when she was convicted of a felony and
    further found the county auditor properly rejected her ballot.                      The
    1Griffin was informed by her attorney at sentencing that her voting rights would
    automatically be restored after discharge of her sentence. At that time, an Executive
    Order signed by Governor Thomas J. Vilsack was in effect, which provided for the
    automatic restoration of the right to vote after discharge from a felony sentence.
    However, on January 14, 2011, Governor Terry E. Branstad issued a new Executive
    Order rescinding the automatic restoration process and replaced it with a process that
    considered any restoration of voting rights for convicted felons on a case-by-case basis.
    In each case, the convicted felon is required to initiate an application requesting the
    restoration of rights.
    5
    district court rejected her claim that her particular felony conviction was
    not the type of conviction that disqualified a person from voting. It also
    rejected her claim that the process to restore voting rights violated her
    due process rights under the Iowa Constitution.
    Griffin exercised her right to ask this court to review the decision of
    the district court. On appeal, she argues her felony conviction did not
    disqualify her under the constitution from the privileges of an elector and
    the voter registration laws that exclude convicted felons who have not
    had their rights restored from voting are invalid and constitute a
    violation of her due process rights. Her due process claim is dependent
    on her predicate argument that her felony conviction did not disqualify
    her from voting under the constitution.
    II. Standard of Review.
    Summary judgment rulings are reviewed for correction of errors at
    law. Baker v. City of Iowa City, 
    867 N.W.2d 44
    , 51 (Iowa 2015). If the
    only concern is the legal consequences of undisputed facts, we resolve
    the matter on summary judgment.           
    Id. Constitutional challenges
    are
    reviewed de novo. Zaber v. City of Dubuque, 
    789 N.W.2d 634
    , 636 (Iowa
    2010).
    III. Right to Vote.
    Voting has traditionally been viewed in our democratic society as a
    basic and fundamental right of citizenship.         Chiodo v. Section 43.24
    Panel, 
    846 N.W.2d 845
    , 848 (Iowa 2014) (plurality opinion).           In our
    representative form of governing, it serves to give a voice to the people.
    
    Id. This voice
    is as important to the democracy as it is to those the
    democracy governs.
    Our constitution establishes the right to vote, but not among those
    rights enumerated in our bill of rights.        Iowa Const. arts. I–II.   Our
    6
    founders chose to address voting in a separate article of the constitution
    captioned as both a right and a privilege. 
    Id. art. II,
    §§ 1, 5. The view
    that voting is a privilege emanates from the constitutional limitations
    placed on electors.        
    Id. §§ 4–5.
          Electors must be citizens of the
    United States and residents of Iowa. 
    Id. §§ 1,
    4. Additionally, otherwise-
    qualified    electors   can   be   disqualified    from   voting.      Under     our
    constitution, a “person adjudged mentally incompetent to vote or a
    person convicted of any infamous crime shall not be entitled to the
    privilege of an elector.” 
    Id. § 5.
    Thus, voting exists as a fundamental
    right for people who meet the constitutional qualifications of an elector
    and are not disqualified by adjudication of incompetency or conviction of
    an infamous crime. 
    Id. §§ 1,
    5.
    IV. Role of the Court.
    The sole issue in this case is whether the felony crime of delivery of
    a controlled substance is an infamous crime.               Under our system of
    governing, this issue is now a question for this court to decide.               The
    legislature enacted a statute in 1994 defining an infamous crime as any
    felony.     1994 Iowa Acts ch. 1180, § 1 (codified at Iowa Code § 39.3(8)
    (2013)). 2 Yet under our democracy, people have the right to challenge
    the constitutionality of a legislative enactment that directly affects them,
    and the judicial branch of government has the responsibility to decide
    the question. In Iowa, that responsibility ultimately falls to this court.
    V. Analytical Framework.
    Our task is to interpret our constitution to decide if it rendered
    Griffin ineligible to vote and, in turn, permitted the county auditor to
    2“ ‘Infamous crime’ means a felony as defined in section 701.7, or an offense
    classified as a felony under federal law.” Iowa Code § 39.3(8).
    7
    reject her ballot.     We must decide if the felony crime of delivery of a
    controlled substance is an infamous crime.
    In Chiodo, we recognized we had never developed a comprehensive
    analysis      to    determine      the     meaning       of    the    infamous-crime
    
    disqualification. 846 N.W.2d at 851
    . It was unnecessary at that time,
    however, to conduct the in-depth analysis needed to articulate such a
    standard. 3        The crime claimed to be infamous in Chiodo was a
    misdemeanor, and we were able to resolve the dispute under a standard
    that only went so far as to exclude misdemeanor crimes from the
    meaning of infamous crimes. 
    Id. at 856–57.
    We understood the limited
    nature of the opinion and saved a more complete analysis for a later
    date. 
    Id. at 857.
    Notwithstanding, the approach taken by the plurality
    opinion was not out of line with our careful approach in interpreting our
    constitution. We have often found it wise to take incremental steps in
    developing constitutional law.
    In taking the next step forward today to develop a more complete
    framework to interpret the infamous-crime language, we are drawn to the
    approach historically taken by courts when called upon to interpret the
    meaning of constitutional phrases that necessarily embody social
    judgments that evolve over time. This approach has allowed courts, for
    example, to usher the “cruel and unusual punishment” clause from
    generation to generation as views of punishment evolve. See generally
    Trop v. Dulles, 
    356 U.S. 86
    , 
    78 S. Ct. 590
    , 
    2 L. Ed. 2d 630
    (1958)
    3Chiodo was an expedited appeal that traveled through the appellate process
    with unprecedented speed. The expedited appeal was necessary to meet the deadline
    for printing ballots prior to the pending election. The notice of appeal from the district
    court decision was filed on April 2, 2014, and we filed our opinion thirteen days later on
    April 15, 2014. During this thirteen-day period, the attorneys prepared and filed briefs,
    oral arguments were held, and three opinions were written.
    8
    (discussing the history and evolution of the Eighth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution). The analysis starts with the understanding
    that the meanings of these constitutional doctrines are not necessarily
    static, and it instead considers current prevailing standards that draw
    their “meaning from the evolving standards . . . that mark the progress of
    a maturing society.” 
    Id. at 100–01,
    78 S. Ct. at 
    598, 2 L. Ed. 2d at 642
    .
    Thus, the analysis considers the objective indicia of the standards of
    society as expressed in legislative enactments and other pronouncements
    and those standards gleaned from the text, history, meaning, and
    purpose of the constitutional phrase. Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
    ,
    61, 
    130 S. Ct. 2011
    , 2022, 
    176 L. Ed. 2d 825
    , 837 (2010). Like the cruel
    and unusual punishment clause, the concept of infamy is not locked into
    a past meaning, but embodies those judgments that reflect its meaning
    today.    Our founders utilized infamy as a concept to govern the
    disqualification of voters and knew it would ultimately be defined by the
    prevailing standards of each generation. Community standards exist to
    shape these constitutional principles until they evolve into a new
    standard or it is determined they are no longer supported by our evolving
    knowledge and understanding.       This approach reveals the enduring
    strength of our constitution.
    Accordingly, we follow the constitutional approach we have
    followed in other cases of constitutional interpretation to decide the
    meaning of an infamous crime today. We begin by looking back to review
    the history of infamy to gain a better understanding of the concept as we
    apply it in this case.
    VI. History of Infamy.
    A. Common Law History.        The concept of infamy originated in
    ancient Greece and Rome.        See Mirjan R. Damaska, Adverse Legal
    9
    Consequences of Conviction and Their Removal: A Comparative Study, 59
    J. Crim. L. Criminology & Police Sci. 347, 351 (1968) [hereinafter
    Damaska].       It described the loss of various rights of citizenship
    associated with the punishment for certain heinous crimes or moral
    turpitude. 
    Id. Infamy was
    a “civic disability, conceived consciously as
    based on a moral imperfection.” A.H.J. Greenidge, Infamia: Its Place in
    Roman Public and Private Law 13 (Oxford, Clarendon Press 1894).
    Different levels of infamy existed, from suspension of voting rights to
    testimonial disqualification. 
    Id. at 6.
    Thus, infamy was a moral censure
    pronounced by the government as a result of acts of moral turpitude. 
    Id. at 18–19,
    37.
    The concept of infamy was absorbed into the canon law of the
    church and from there disseminated into the laws in Europe.             See
    1 Julius Goebel, Jr., Felony and Misdemeanor: A Study in the History of
    English Criminal Procedure 70–73 & nn.17–22 (1937).            Indeed, “the
    infamy notion be[came], for both church and state, basic to their
    schemes of law enforcement, and eventually to the whole structure of
    human relationships.” 
    Id. at 73.
    In some countries during the Middle
    Ages, the use of publicly degrading punishments like the pillory resulted
    in infamy. Damaska, 59 J. Crim. L. Criminology & Police Sci. at 351. In
    France, infamy eventually developed into the loss of civil rights, including
    the exclusion from public office, deprivation of the right to vote or be
    elected, disqualification from testimonial capacity, disqualification from
    acting as guardian or conservator, and prohibition from bearing arms or
    serving as a teacher. 
    Id. at 352–53.
    By the eighteenth century, English common law recognized two
    kinds of infamy—one respecting the mode of punishment and the other
    the future credibility of the person.      William Eden, Principles of Penal
    10
    Law ch. 7, § 5, at 61 (3d ed. London, B. White 1772). The law expressed
    the notion that “the stamp of ignominy [was] . . . [the] best instrument for
    the promotion of morality, and the extirpation of vice.” 
    Id. § 2,
    at 57.
    Infamous punishments included corporal punishments—“affecting the
    body and publicly inflicted”—and “degradations from titles of honour,
    civil incapacities, brandings, and public exhibitions of the offender”; they
    were to be limited to “offences infamous in their nature.” 
    Id. § 3,
    at 58–
    59. The stamp of infamy and accompanying civil incapacity served both
    a retributive goal by depriving those who break society’s rules of society’s
    privileges and a deterrent goal by the stigmatizing effect of the
    humiliation and isolation offenders suffered in small communities.
    Howard Itzkowitz & Lauren Oldak, Note, Restoring the Ex-offender’s Right
    to Vote: Background and Developments, 11 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 721, 726–
    27 (1973).
    A person’s position in society depended in part on their character
    and individual worth, and a bad character by itself was sufficient to
    incapacitate a person’s ability to swear an oath. Diane L. Zimmerman,
    Requiem for a Heavyweight: A Farewell to Warren and Brandeis’s Privacy
    Tort, 68 Cornell L. Rev. 291, 327–28 (1983). Without the ability to swear
    an oath, the person could not participate in legal proceedings as a
    plaintiff, a witness, or even to clear himself when charged. 
    Id. at 328.
    Those deemed infamous suffered civil degradation by losing the rights of
    citizenship such as “the right to testify in court, bring civil prosecution,
    serve on juries, hold public office, or enlist in the army.” Pippa Holloway,
    Living in Infamy: Felon Disfranchisement and the History of American
    Citizenship 3–4 (2014) [hereinafter Holloway].
    The crimes that fell into the infamous category at common law
    were treason, felony, and the crimen falsi. 2 Francis Wharton, A Treatise
    11
    on the Criminal Law of the United States § 758, at 416 (4th rev. ed.,
    Phila., Kay & Bro. 1857) [hereinafter Wharton 1857].           It is helpful to
    consider the meaning of each category as developed over time. Treason
    today is generally associated with actions taken expressly against the
    state by attempting to overthrow the government or aiding its enemies.
    See U.S. Const. art. III, § 3, cl. 1; Iowa Const. art. I, § 16; Treason,
    Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). However, when English common
    law was still developing, two levels of treason were set in a fourteenth
    century statute: high treason and petty (or petit) treason. Theodore F.T.
    Plucknett, A Concise History of the Common Law 443 (5th ed. 1956)
    [hereinafter Plucknett]; see also 4 William Blackstone, Commentaries
    *75–76 [hereinafter Blackstone]. The petty treasons related to conspiring
    against one’s liege lord, specifically the killing of a husband by his wife, a
    master by his servant, or a prelate by his subject. Plucknett, at 443; see
    4 Blackstone, at *75.    These petty treasons have since been absorbed
    into the murder category of felonies and are no longer designated as
    treasons.   See 
    1 Whart. 1857
    § 1, at 111.          High treason included:
    plotting the death of the king, queen, or heir; violating the king’s wife, his
    oldest unmarried daughter, or his heir’s wife; taking up arms against the
    king or aiding his enemies; counterfeiting the great seal; counterfeiting
    money; and slaying the chancellor, treasurer, or judges while sitting in
    court. 4 Blackstone, at *76–85; Plucknett, at 443. All high treason was
    punishable by a torturous death. 4 Blackstone, at *92–93.
    At common law, the next level of offense down from treason was
    felony. “All treasons, therefore, strictly speaking, are felonies, though all
    felonies are not treason.”    
    Id. at *95.
       In the middle ages, the list of
    felonies was short and narrowly defined.            Generally, felonies only
    included    “murder,   manslaughter,      arson,   burglary,   robbery,   rape,
    12
    sodomy, mayhem, and larceny.”            
    1 Whart. 1857
    , § 2, at 112; see
    Plucknett, at 442–51. In English common law, felonies consisted of the
    crimes that would be punished by “a total forfeiture of either lands or
    goods, or both, . . . and to which capital or other punishment may be
    superadded, according to the degree of guilt.” 4 Blackstone, at *95. “In
    this country, with a few exceptions, the common law classification has
    obtained; the principal felonies being received as they originally existed,
    and their number being increased as the exigencies of society prompted.”
    
    1 Whart. 1857
    , § 2, at 112.
    “Just what the scope of the term crimen falsi was seems never to
    have been accurately defined . . . .” Ralph R. Wood, Note, Infamy as a
    Testimonial Disqualification, 
    2 Tex. L. Rev. 227
    , 228 (1924). 4 In the late
    seventeenth century, the concept of crimen falsi began to be used to
    disqualify witnesses under the theory that the deceit of those convicted
    rendered them unable to be trusted to testify truthfully. Stuart P. Green,
    Deceit and the Classification of Crimes: Federal Rule of Evidence 609(A)(2)
    and the Origins of Crimen Falsi, 90 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 1087, 1106
    (2000). 5 In 1857, Wharton defined the disqualifying crimen falsi as those
    that both “involve[] the charge of falsehood” and “may injuriously affect
    the administration of justice, by the introduction of falsehood and fraud.”
    
    2 Whart. 1857
    § 759, at 416.             He proceeded to identify “forgery,
    perjury, subornation of perjury, suppression of testimony by bribery,
    conspiracy to procure the absence of a witness, or conspiracy to accuse
    4Wood noted that practically the scope of crimes included in crimen falsi had
    been construed as crimes of a felony grade. 
    Wood, 2 Tex. L. Rev. at 228
    .
    5Before  the seventeenth century, the crimen falsi were primarily forgery and
    counterfeiting, both of which fell within the treason category and were punished as
    such, not singled out for punishment based on their deceitful nature. Green, 90 J.
    Crim. L. & Criminology at 1104–05.
    13
    another of crime, and barratry” as the qualifying offenses. 
    Id. (footnotes omitted).
    6
    Infamy in the first half of the nineteenth century was understood
    in two contexts: infamy of the crime and infamy of the punishment. The
    infamy of the crime was considered to destroy the competency of the
    person convicted. Francis Wharton, A Treatise on the Criminal Law of the
    United States 202 (Phila., James Kay, Jun. & Bro. 1846) [hereinafter
    Wharton 1846]. It is this type of infamy that led to voter, witness, and
    juror   disqualifications.         Holloway,     at    3–4    (“Infamous      individuals
    experienced civil ‘degradation’—meaning the loss of the rights of
    citizenship.”).
    During the early nineteenth century, many states added provisions
    to their constitutions excluding persons convicted of infamous crimes
    from the right of suffrage.             Ohio passed the first infamous-crime
    exclusion provision in 1803, giving the legislature “full power to exclude
    from the privilege of electing, or being elected, any person convicted of
    bribery, perjury, or any other infamous crime.”                 Ohio Const. of 1803,
    art. IV, § 4. Nine other states had added similar restrictions by the time
    voters approved the Iowa Constitution of 1846.                   Ark. Const. of 1836,
    art. IV, § 12; Fla. Const. of 1838, art. VI, § 4; Ill. Const. of 1818, art. II,
    § 30; Ind. Const. of 1816, art. VI, § 4; Mo. Const. of 1820, art. III, § 14;
    N.Y. Const. of 1821, art. II, § 2; R.I. Const. of 1843, art. II, § 4; Tenn.
    Const. of 1835, art. IV, § 2; Va. Const. of 1830, art. III, § 14. 7
    6In the 1846 edition of his treatise, Wharton only specified “perjury, forgery, . . .
    conspiracy, barratry, and the like” as crimen falsi. Francis Wharton, A Treatise on the
    Criminal Law of the United States 201–02 (Phila., James Kay, Jun. & Bro. 1846).
    7Otherstates excluded voters based on other variants of criminal conviction.
    For example, Connecticut tied electoral privilege forfeiture to conviction of an offense for
    which an infamous punishment is inflicted rather than an infamous crime. Conn.
    14
    “Persons convicted of treason, felony, piracy, præmunire, perjury,
    forgery, or any other species of the crimen falsi, such as conspiracy,
    barratry, and the like, [we]re inadmissible” as witnesses. Wharton 1846,
    at 201–02 (footnotes omitted).          Despite this particularized listing, just
    eleven years later in a subsequent edition of the same treatise, Wharton
    noted, “[I]t is a difficult point to determine precisely the offences which
    render the perpetrator of them infamous; the usual and more general
    enumeration of them being treason, felony, and the crimen falsi.”
    
    2 Whart. 1857
    § 758, at 416.             Wharton’s definitions are particularly
    persuasive of the conception of infamous crime at the time of our
    constitution because the two editions cited here were published the same
    years as Iowa voters ratified the two versions of the Iowa Constitution.
    Overall, the common law reveals that as the concept of democratic
    governing began to emerge, the concept of infamy took firm hold as a
    standard utilized to disqualify people from engaging in various civic
    functions, including voting. Overall, it is fair to conclude the concept of
    infamous crimes was commonly associated with felony crimes.
    B. Iowa History.         We next review the history of the concept of
    infamy in Iowa.       We begin with our constitution and then separately
    consider its history in each branch of government.
    1. Constitutional history. The common law concept of disqualifying
    a person from voting based on the conviction of an infamous crime
    _________________________
    Const. of 1818, art. VI, § 3. New Jersey excluded those convicted of crimes that result
    in the loss of the ability to act as a witness, essentially an infamous-crime provision.
    N.J. Const. of 1844, art. II, § 1. The term “high crimes and misdemeanors” also
    appeared in disqualification provisions. See, e.g., Ala. Const. of 1819, art. VI, § 5; Ky.
    Const. of 1799, art. VI, § 4; La. Const. of 1812, art. VI, § 4.
    15
    emerged in Iowa as a part of our first constitution in 1846. 8                       The
    provision was then included in our revised constitution in 1857.                       As
    originally enacted, article II, section 5 provided “no idiot, or insane
    person, or person convicted of any infamous crime, shall be entitled to
    the privilege of an elector.” Iowa Const. art. II, § 5 (repealed 2008). This
    language remained intact for the next 151 years. In 2008, the section
    was amended to “remove[] the words ‘idiot’ and ‘insane’ from the
    constitutional      provision     and     substitute[]      the    phrase     ‘mentally
    incompetent to vote.’ ” See Legislative Servs. Agency, 2007 Summary of
    Legislation,      H.J.R.      3—Proposed          Constitutional        Amendment—
    Qualification of Electors (Iowa 2007), https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/
    publications/SOL/401775.pdf. Thus, today, article II, section 5 provides
    that “a person adjudicated mentally incompetent to vote or a person
    convicted of any infamous crime shall not be entitled to the privilege of
    an elector.” Iowa Const. art. II, § 5 (ratified 2008).
    2. Legislative history.          Our early territorial laws specifically
    identified crimes deemed to be infamous. See The Statute Laws of the
    Territory of Iowa, Code of Criminal Jurisprudence, § 109, at 182 (1839)
    [hereinafter 1839 Statute Laws]. This classification was primarily found
    in a statute that included crimes such as rape, kidnapping, perjury,
    arson, burglary, robbery, sodomy, the crime against nature, larceny,
    forgery, counterfeiting, and bigamy, but did not mention other statutory
    crimes such as manslaughter, mayhem, assault, false imprisonment,
    bribery, and fraudulent misrepresentation. Compare 
    id., with id.
    Code of
    8A  different version of the clause was originally proposed, disqualifying “persons
    declared infamous by act of the legislature.” Iowa Const. of 1844, art. III, § 5. This
    provision would be functional as long as the legislature deemed people infamous based
    on criminal convictions, as done in the 1839 territorial statute. See The Statute Laws of
    the Territory of Iowa, Code of Criminal Jurisprudence, § 109, at 182 (1839).
    16
    Criminal Procedure § 92, at 126 (defining felony), and 
    id. Code of
    Criminal Jurisprudence §§ 1–96, at 150–170 (describing various crimes
    and punishments). Crimes punishable by death—such as murder—were
    also not included, presumably because the sentence eliminated the need
    to impose any disqualifications.
    While this early legislative history reveals the concept of infamy
    was swiftly introduced into the culture of Iowa with clarity, the law was
    short-lived.       The infamous-crime statute retreated into legislative
    obscurity almost as quickly as it surfaced.               The territorial legislature
    repealed the statute in 1843 and did not redefine infamy in a new
    statute.   See Revised Statutes of the Territory of Iowa ch. 49, class 2,
    § 48, at 137 (1843). 9 The concept then essentially lay dormant in the
    legislative branch of government for over a century and a half, despite its
    continued prominent presence as a constitutional restriction on voting.
    During these nearly eight generations of Iowa life, the public attitudes
    about crime shifted and many new crimes were identified and introduced
    into our criminal code. See, e.g., Iowa Code § 124.401 (2013) (controlled
    substances); 
    id. § 321J.2
    (operating while intoxicated); 
    id. ch. 708A
    (terrorism); 
    id. § 710A.2
    (human trafficking); 
    id. § 715A.8
    (identity theft).
    Compare Iowa Code §§ 914–919, 1019–1027 (1919) (prohibiting sale,
    9Instead,  the legislature divided crimes into two classes. One class essentially
    included crimes punishable by incarceration in the penitentiary, and the other class
    included crimes punishable by fine or incarceration in the county jail. Revised Statutes
    of the Territory of Iowa ch. 49, §§ 1–75, at 119–30; 
    id. ch. 49,
    class 2, §§ 1–39, at 131–
    36. It then declared persons convicted of crimes punishable by imprisonment in the
    penitentiary “to be deemed incompetent to be an elector, juror, or witness” or hold
    public office. 
    Id. ch. 49,
    § 79, at 131. This approach, however, was effectively
    preempted by the adoption of the constitution in 1846. Further, in 1849, the
    legislature adopted an elector-qualifications statute specifying an infamous-crimes
    conviction disqualified an elector. 1849 Iowa Acts ch. 105, § 1. Yet no elector-
    qualifications provision was incorporated into the 1851 Iowa Code. See Iowa Code
    §§ 244–261, at 33–35 (1851).
    17
    manufacture, possession, transportation, and advertising of liquor, beer,
    and wine and increasing associated penalties), with Iowa Code §§ 1921-
    f18 to -f37 (1935) (establishing state-run liquor stores and permit
    systems). Yet through all the years and shifts in our criminal law, the
    concept of infamy and its disqualification of voters largely remained
    dormant.
    Then, in 1993, Congress passed the National Voter Registration
    Act of 1993. 52 U.S.C. §§ 20501–20511 (2012). The purpose of the Act
    was to establish procedures to increase the number of registered voters,
    enhance voter participation in elections, “protect the integrity of the
    electoral process,” and to ensure current and accurate voter registration
    lists. 
    Id. § 20501.
    Among the provisions to expand voter registration,
    the Act established requirements for state voter registration rolls.   
    Id. § 20507.
    Among those requirements was a provision that allowed states
    to remove the name of a registrant from the list of eligible voters “as
    provided by State law, by reason of criminal conviction or mental
    incapacity.” 
    Id. § 20507(a)(3)(B).
    This law awoke our legislature to take
    action to define those criminal convictions that would make a person
    ineligible to vote.
    During the next session of the General Assembly, the Iowa
    legislature passed an act to implement the National Voter Registration
    Act. 1994 Iowa Acts ch. 1169 (codified in scattered sections of Iowa Code
    (1995)).   This implementation act disqualified persons convicted of a
    felony as defined under Iowa Code section 701.7 or a federal felony. 
    Id. § 7
    (codified at Iowa Code § 48A.6). It also provided for the removal of
    voters from the registration list by requiring the court to send notice of
    18
    convictions to the state registrar of voters. 
    Id. § 31
    (codified at Iowa Code
    § 48A.30(1)(d)). 10
    The legislature passed a second election law act around the same
    time with more election and registration laws as well as corrective and
    technical changes to Iowa’s election laws.               1994 Iowa Acts ch. 1180
    (codified in scattered sections of Iowa Code). The first provision of this
    act defined an infamous crime as a felony under section 701.7 or a
    federal felony, thereby bringing section 48A.6 disqualifications in
    compliance with the language of article II, section 5 of the Iowa
    Constitution. 
    Id. § 1
    (now codified at Iowa Code § 39.3(8) (2013)). The
    statute meant that convicted felons in Iowa were disqualified from voting.
    This law enacted by our legislature remains our law today.
    3. Judicial history. Our court has not had many opportunities to
    shape the meaning of infamy over the years in the context of voter
    disqualification. We first discussed the concept of infamous crimes in
    1848, two years after we became a state.               See Carter v. Cavenaugh, 
    1 Greene 171
    , 176 (Iowa 1848). However, we did so only in the course of
    deciding the proper method to impeach a witness who testified at trial.
    See 
    id. at 176–77.
           In Carter, we limited impeachment testimony of a
    witness to general reputation, not specific crimes. 
    Id. at 179.
    In doing
    so, we observed the history of disqualifying a witness from testifying. 
    Id. at 176–77.
          We recognized infamous crimes that render a witness
    incompetent to testify were “the heinous crimes classed as treason,
    felony, and the crimen falsi as understood at common law.” 
    Id. at 176.
    We also observed infamous crimes were crimes of moral depravity that
    10A  similar provision had previously been in place, canceling the registration of a
    qualified elector when the clerk of court sent notice of conviction of a felony. Iowa Code
    § 48.31(4) (1993).
    19
    rendered the person incompetent to participate in many aspects of
    government until pardoned. 
    Id. Over fifty
    years passed before we again addressed the concept of
    infamy, but it was once more in the context of the testimony of a witness
    at trial. In 1901, we noted,
    [T]here has been great difficulty among judges and text
    writers in stating any satisfactory rule for determining
    definitely what are the crimes conviction of which
    disqualifies a witness from testifying. Without controversy,
    conviction for treason or felony will disqualify, but as to
    other crimes it has been said that they must be in their
    nature infamous; and this has been interpreted to include
    only those crimes involving the element of falsifying, such as
    perjury or forgery, or other crimes which tend to the
    perversion of justice in the courts.
    Palmer v. Cedar Rapids & Marion Ry., 
    113 Iowa 442
    , 446, 
    85 N.W. 756
    ,
    757 (1901).
    We next considered the concept of infamy in 1916. In Flannagan
    v. Jepson, 
    177 Iowa 393
    , 399–401, 
    158 N.W. 641
    , 643–44 (1916), we
    examined Ex parte Wilson, 
    114 U.S. 417
    , 429, 
    5 S. Ct. 935
    , 941, 
    29 L. Ed. 89
    , 93 (1885) (determining that for purposes of the Fifth
    Amendment, a crime punishable by an infamous punishment like hard
    labor in a penitentiary is an infamous crime 11), to determine whether an
    infamous punishment could be imposed for contempt and ultimately
    decided that imposition of an infamous punishment requires conviction
    of a charge triable by jury.        However, we inadvertently removed the
    limiting clause “within the meaning of the [F]ifth [A]mendment” from the
    11The   Wilson Court expressly distinguished between “crimes subject to any
    infamous punishment” and “crimes infamous in their nature, independently of the
    punishment affixed to them,” though it allowed that the crimes subject to capital or
    infamous punishment could also include crimes infamous in nature. 
    Wilson, 114 U.S. at 422-24
    , 5 S. Ct. at 
    937–38, 29 L. Ed. at 91
    .
    20
    Wilson definition of infamous crime and followed the Supreme Court’s
    pronouncement that infamous crime referred to crimes punishable by
    imprisonment in a penitentiary. Compare 
    Flannagan, 177 Iowa at 400
    ,
    158 N.W. at 643, with 
    Wilson, 114 U.S. at 429
    , 5 S. Ct. at 
    941, 29 L. Ed. at 93
    . This move significantly impacted our development of the concept
    as applied to voter disqualification in the next infamous-crime case we
    decided.
    In the same year we decided Flannagan, we were also presented
    with a case for the first time that addressed the concept of infamous
    crimes in the context of qualified electors.   In Blodgett v. Clarke, 
    177 Iowa 575
    , 578, 
    159 N.W. 243
    , 244 (1916) (per curiam), overruled by
    
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 852
    , we were required to decide if forgery was an
    infamous crime that would disqualify an elector from running for public
    office.     We found ourselves squarely confronted with the meaning of
    infamous crime under article II, section 5 of our constitution and its
    application to disqualify an elector. 
    Id. In considering
    the question on
    the heels of Flannagan, we wasted no time in holding that an infamous
    crime was any crime punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary.
    
    Id. Our pronouncement
    closely aligned with the approach taken in
    Wilson.      See id.; 
    Flannagan, 177 Iowa at 400
    , 158 N.W. at 643.    We
    engaged in no independent analysis and effectively made felonies and
    infamous crimes synonymous under Iowa law.         See Iowa Code § 5093
    (1897) (defining felony as “a public offense . . . punish[able] by
    imprisonment in the penitentiary”).
    We returned to consider the concept of infamy in the context of
    witness disqualification in State v. Voelpel, 
    208 Iowa 1049
    , 1050, 
    226 N.W. 770
    , 771 (1929). In that case, we distinguished between infamous
    crimes, crimes of moral turpitude, and felonies:
    21
    We are not confronted with the question of whether the
    previous conviction of a witness must be of “an infamous
    crime,” or one “involving moral turpitude.” By statute the
    proof may be only of “previous conviction for a felony.” This
    is one of the methods of impeachment of a witness. It may
    be true that in ancient times, and under the common law, a
    witness who had been previously convicted of an “infamous
    crime” was not permitted to testify at all. However, the law
    is now more logical and rational in this regard.
    
    Id. at 1051,
    226 N.W. at 771. Although this language strongly implied a
    distinction between infamous crime and felony, the nature of that
    distinction remained unsaid, with the distinction between a witness’s
    disqualification from testifying and the impeachment of the witness
    instead taking center stage. 12 See 
    id. In 1957,
    we addressed the concept of infamy in State ex rel. Dean
    v. Haubrich, 
    248 Iowa 978
    , 980, 
    83 N.W.2d 451
    , 452 (1957). Yet we did
    not forge any new ground from the path taken in Blodgett.                        See 
    id. Rather, we
    focused on whether a person convicted of an infamous crime
    could become eligible for elected office by the governor restoring state
    citizenship rights. 
    Id. at 985–86,
    83 N.W.2d at 455. As in Blodgett, we
    engaged in no independent analysis of the meaning of infamous crime.
    Then, just two years ago, we were required to consider the concept
    of infamous crimes in the same context we did in Blodgett almost a
    12In  some cases, we have specifically noted crimes as infamous in nature. See
    State v. Pilcher, 
    242 N.W.2d 367
    , 368–69 (Iowa 1976) (sodomy); State v. Gruver, 
    260 Iowa 131
    , 134, 
    148 N.W.2d 405
    , 407 (1967) (forgery); Kotek v. Bennett, 
    255 Iowa 984
    ,
    988, 
    124 N.W.2d 710
    , 712 (1963) (first-degree murder, under a Fifth Amendment
    challenge); State ex rel. Dean v. Haubrich, 
    248 Iowa 978
    , 979–80, 
    83 N.W.2d 451
    , 452
    (1957) (federal tax evasion); 
    Blodgett, 177 Iowa at 578
    , 159 N.W. at 244 (forgery); State
    v. Kingsley, 
    39 Iowa 439
    , 441 (1874) (seduction). However, in each of these cases, the
    crime was simply noted as an infamous crime, not evaluated to determine whether or
    why it should be considered infamous. Finally, in State v. Cullison, 
    173 N.W.2d 533
    ,
    537 (Iowa 1970), we noted the felon had constitutionally lost his right to vote and hold
    public office as a result of his felony conviction but did not include which felony he was
    convicted of that resulted in the loss of the right.
    22
    century earlier. 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 848
    . In Chiodo, as in Blodgett,
    we were asked to determine if a criminal conviction disqualified a person
    under the voting provision of our constitution from running for public
    office. 
    Id. at 848–49.
    However, unlike the felony level crime of forgery in
    Blodgett, the crime involved in Chiodo was the aggravated misdemeanor
    of operating while intoxicated, second offense. 
    Id. at 849;
    Blodgett, 177
    Iowa at 578
    , 159 N.W. at 244.
    For the first time, we engaged in a comprehensive review of our law
    on infamous crime. See 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 848
    –56. In doing so, we
    discovered that our prior cases never engaged in a textual analysis of the
    meaning of infamous crime in article II, section 5 of our constitution.
    See 
    id. at 849–51.
    The plurality opinion rejected the Blodgett standard
    that broadly defined infamous crimes as any crime punishable by
    imprisonment in the state penitentiary. 
    Id. at 852.
    It also rejected the
    notion of infamy as a criminal punishment and concluded that our
    founders viewed the concept more as a regulatory measure intended to
    “preserve the integrity of the process of voting” and to protect the process
    from those “infected by an infamous disposition.” 
    Id. at 855.
    Although
    we identified various tests used in other states to determine if a crime
    was infamous—affront to democratic governance, the common law
    definition, or crimes of great moral turpitude—we declined to adopt any
    of them at that time. 
    Id. at 856.
    Instead, we only utilized two criteria:
    the crime “must be classified as particularly serious” and “must . . .
    reveal[] that voters who commit the crime would tend to undermine the
    process of democratic governance through elections.” 
    Id. We held
    that
    to meet the first criterion, a particularly serious nature, the crime must
    be a felony, not a misdemeanor. 
    Id. at 856–57.
                                        23
    4. Executive history. With the absence of a statute governing the
    disqualification of voters for convictions of infamous crimes in almost all
    but the last two decades of our statehood, little history of executive
    branch enforcement of the constitutional provision governing voter
    disqualification exists in Iowa.   Yet cases like Blodgett and Haubrich
    would not have made it to our court if the executive branch had not been
    implementing the disqualification of otherwise eligible electors convicted
    of committing infamous crimes.     Moreover, Haubrich provides evidence
    that governors over the years have used the pardoning power to restore
    elective rights to convicted persons. See 248 Iowa at 
    985–86, 83 N.W.2d at 455
    –56. Overall, the restoration of voting rights of convicted felons
    who have completed their sentences provides the most significant history
    of executive branch action, particularly in recent times.
    The last decade has revealed two different approaches by the
    executive branch to the restoration of voting rights through the exercise
    of the power to pardon. On July 4, 2005, Governor Thomas J. Vilsack
    signed Executive Order number 42.           Exec. Order No. 42 (2005),
    http://publications.iowa.gov/3762/1/EO_42.pdf.        This order restored
    the citizenship rights—including voting rights and eligibility for public
    office—for “all offenders that are completely discharged from criminal
    sentence, including any accompanying term of probation, parole, or
    supervised release.” 
    Id. It further
    provided that eligible offenders would
    automatically be reviewed to determine whether to restore their rights
    when their sentences were discharged. 
    Id. The order
    was rescinded on
    January 14, 2011, by Governor Terry E. Branstad. Exec. Order No. 70
    (2011), http://publications.iowa.gov/10194/1/BranstadEO70.pdf. Cur-
    rently, offenders who have discharged their sentences are required to go
    through an application process before their voting rights may be
    24
    restored.    
    Id. Each application
    is then considered on a case-by-case
    basis by the governor’s office.
    In addition to an executive branch history of restoring voting rights
    through the exercise of the power to pardon, the history of the executive
    branch also includes opinions from the office of the Iowa Attorney
    General discussing infamous crimes, disqualification, and the restoration
    of rights. An early opinion concluded that the restoration of rights was
    incident to the governor’s constitutional power to pardon and that a
    restoration could not happen without the right to pardon. Op. Iowa Att’y
    Gen. (Nov. 17, 1898), 
    1898 WL 37740
    , at *1.           In 1912, an advisory
    opinion     written   to   then-Governor   B.F.   Carroll   noted   that   the
    disqualification provision was not limited to state convictions and that an
    infamous crime in state or federal court fell within the scope of article II,
    section 5 of the Iowa Constitution. Op. Iowa Att’y Gen. (Oct. 16, 1912),
    
    1912 WL 49029
    , at *1 (opining the governor had the right to restore state
    citizenship rights regardless of jurisdiction of conviction).        A 1924
    opinion stated that a convict (other than one guilty of treason or in a
    case of impeachment) that had discharged his sentence and received a
    certificate of restoration “is restored to the same position in which he was
    before his conviction and is therefore, restored to the privileges of an
    elector.” Op. Iowa Att’y Gen. (Mar. 8, 1924), 
    1924 WL 60500
    , at *2. In
    1936, the attorney general’s office expressly linked the restoration to a
    pardon and noted that the rights of citizenship cannot be enjoyed
    following a conviction “until and unless” a restoration is granted. Op.
    Iowa Att’y Gen. (Apr. 13, 1936), 
    1936 WL 68639
    , at *2.
    In 1957, the attorney general concluded the governor was “the sole
    judge as to what conditions must be met before such restoration may be
    procured” and that the power to restore rights rested exclusively in the
    25
    Office of the Governor. Op. Iowa Att’y Gen. (May 20, 1957), 
    1957 WL 93124
    , at *1. In 1964, the attorney general informed the governor that
    his power to restore Iowa citizenship rights extended to those convicted
    in other states, unless they had already been pardoned in that other
    state. Op. Iowa Att’y Gen. (June 9, 1964), 
    1964 WL 121187
    , at *2.
    The legislature consulted with the attorney general in 1976 when
    amending the election-related criminal penalties.     See Op. Iowa Att’y
    Gen. No. 76-3-7 (Mar. 11, 1976), 
    1976 WL 375888
    , at *1.         First, the
    attorney general found that under        the then-current    Iowa court
    precedent, aggravated and serious misdemeanors would fall within the
    category of infamous crimes based on the penitentiary punishment
    proposed.   
    Id. at *2.
      Second, the attorney general concluded that a
    statutory provision restoring elective rights following discharge would
    both violate the elector requirements of article II, section 5 of the Iowa
    Constitution and infringe on the pardoning powers of the executive
    branch. 
    Id. at *3–4.
    This was the approach followed by the dissenting
    opinion in Chiodo. 
    See 846 N.W.2d at 863
    –65 (Wiggins, J., dissenting).
    The final useful guidance from the attorney general’s office was
    directed to the Iowa Voter Registration Commission in 1985 regarding
    the application of statutes implementing article II, section 5 of the Iowa
    Constitution. Op. Iowa Att’y Gen. No. 85-6-7(L) (June 19, 1985), 
    1985 WL 549204
    , at *1. The opinion observed that the courts had not fully
    considered the term “infamous crime” since 1916 in Flannagan. 
    Id. at *3.
    It found the year-or-more-confinement formulation of the term stated
    in Flannagan and Haubrich to be problematic, questioning whether that
    formulation would withstand judicial review, but concluded that the
    executive branch was bound to it. 
    Id. at *3–4.
                                        26
    As a whole, the history of the executive branch of government
    provides more insight into the debate over the restoration of voting rights
    than the debate over what crimes should result in the loss of voting
    rights.   However, the debate over the restoration of rights after
    completing the sentence is separate and distinct from the debate over the
    types of crime that should be considered infamous and does not
    influence the meaning of infamy.
    C. Application of Infamy in Contexts Other Than Voting. This
    historical background serves not as the end, but as the beginning point
    in our analysis. One author explains that those convicted of infamous
    crimes have breached the civic trust and that regaining the right to vote
    serves as the relevant currency signaling the breaching party once again
    meets the standards of society and has been restored to that civic trust.
    Mary Sigler, Defensible Disenfranchisement, 
    99 Iowa L
    . Rev. 1725, 1728,
    1736–38 (2014).    This concept relates to social-contract theories that
    suffrage protects citizens from misrule and requires them to not harm
    each other. See 
    id. at 1736–38
    (examining the topic of “civic trust” and
    its application to the electoral process); see also Alec C. Ewald, “Civil
    Death”: The Ideological Paradox of Criminal Disenfranchisement Law in
    the United States, 
    2002 Wis. L
    . Rev. 1045, 1073–78 (examining the
    relation of principles from John Locke, Thomas Paine, and Alexis
    de Tocqueville to American attitudes toward criminals).        Under this
    theory, those who harm others or society through criminal action would
    exercise the right to vote in a way to harm society.     Although society
    believes in the rehabilitation of offenders and attitudes toward those who
    have discharged their sentences have evolved considerably, we must
    determine societal attitudes toward those still under sentence as well as
    those with completed sentences.          Attitudes might be changing to
    27
    recognize that those convicted of infamous crimes can be trustworthy
    and valuable electors, but the premise of at least some disqualification
    based on conviction still appears to have general acceptance throughout
    the country. 13
    As mentioned above, under English common law, those convicted
    of infamous crimes were barred from testifying because they were
    considered incompetent. 3 Blackstone, at *370 (“Infamous persons are
    such as may be challenged as jurors, propter delictum (on account of
    incompetency) and therefore never shall be admitted to give evidence to
    inform that jury, with whom they were too scandalous to associate.”).
    The nature of the crime, not the potential for infliction of an infamous
    punishment, provided the ground for incompetency. 2 William Oldnall
    Russell, A Treatise on Crimes and Indictable Misdemeanors 593 (Theron
    Metcalf ed., 2d Am. ed., Phila., P.H. Nicklin & T. Johnson 1831). This
    practice of disqualifying those convicted of infamous crimes from
    testifying in court was already changing by the time our constitution was
    ratified. See George Fisher, The Jury’s Rise as Lie Detector, 107 Yale L.J.
    575, 656–71 (1997) (tracing the fall of competency rules governing felon
    testimony in civil and criminal cases).
    As early as 1848, our court expressed doubt of the link between
    truthfulness and character as applied to witness testimony. See 
    Carter, 1 Greene at 176
    –77. By 1851, our statutes allowed “[f]acts which have
    heretofore caused the exclusion of testimony” to be admitted to lessen
    credibility, but the testimony of those convicted of felonies was
    13Only two states, Maine and Vermont, do not impose any voting restrictions or
    disenfranchise voters for criminal conviction. See Criminal Disenfranchisement Laws
    Across the United States, Brennan Ctr. for Justice (May 31, 2016),
    http://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/publications/Criminal_Disenfranchi
    sement_Map.pdf.
    28
    permitted.    Iowa Code §§ 2389, 2398 (1851).      In 1892, the Supreme
    Court observed that barriers excluding witnesses had been falling:
    [I]t is generally, though perhaps not universally, true that no
    one is excluded [from testifying] unless the lips of the
    originally adverse party are closed by death, or unless some
    one of those peculiarly confidential relations, like that of
    husband and wife, forbids the breaking of silence.
    Benson v. United States, 
    146 U.S. 325
    , 337, 
    13 S. Ct. 60
    , 64, 
    36 L. Ed. 991
    , 996 (1892). This movement continued and was reinforced by the
    Court in 1918, “leaving the credit and weight of such testimony to be
    determined by the jury or by the court, rather than by rejecting
    witnesses as incompetent.” Rosen v. United States, 
    245 U.S. 467
    , 471,
    
    38 S. Ct. 148
    , 150, 
    62 L. Ed. 406
    , 409 (1918). The Rosen Court noted
    the extension reached those convicted of perjury, even though perjury
    reflected “a greater disregard for the truth than it was thought should be
    implied from a conviction of other crime.” 
    Id. Today the
    federal and state rules of evidence allow impeachment of
    a witness for conviction of a crime punishable by death or imprisonment
    of a year or more or for conviction of a crime involving dishonesty or false
    statement; the rules do not disqualify witnesses from testimony based on
    any crimes.    Fed. R. Evid. 609(a); Iowa R. Evid. 5.609(a).     While the
    admissibility of most convictions for impeachment purposes is subject to
    a rule 5.403 balancing of the probative nature of the conviction versus its
    prejudicial value, crimes involving dishonesty and false statement—i.e.
    the crimen falsi—are not subject to discretionary exclusion.       State v.
    Harrington, 
    800 N.W.2d 46
    , 49–51 (Iowa 2011). However, the rule places
    a time limit on either form of impeachment: ten years from the later of
    the date of conviction or the date of release from confinement. Fed. R.
    Evid. 609(b); Iowa R. Evid. 5.609(b).
    29
    Conviction of an infamous crime disqualified a person from serving
    as a juror for considerably longer than the testimonial disqualification.
    In 1851, only qualified electors “of good moral character [and] sound
    judgment” could be competent jurors. Iowa Code § 1630. As article II,
    section 5 of the Iowa Constitution expressly excepted those convicted of
    infamous crimes from being an elector, the statute had the effect of
    disqualifying every person convicted of an infamous crime from jury
    service.   This “qualified elector” requirement remained the law in Iowa
    until 1984. 1984 Iowa Acts ch. 1181, § 2 (repealing Iowa Code § 607.1
    (1983) (juror qualifications)).   The replacement qualifications no longer
    required status as a qualified elector and did not otherwise disqualify a
    person from jury service based on a conviction. See 
    id. § 3
    (codified at
    Iowa Code § 607.2 (1985)).        Jury lists were no longer a selection of
    eligible electors derived from lists of registered voters or drivers’ license
    holders, but instead became a selection of those qualified for service
    taken from a combined list of voters, drivers’ license holders, and public
    utility customers. Compare Iowa Code § 609.5 (1983), with Iowa Code
    § 609.5 (1985).
    The court ceased invalidating verdicts from juries that included a
    disqualified   juror   much   earlier    in   time   than   the   jury   service
    disqualification ended.   In 1860, we held that a defendant waives any
    objection to a juror’s bias or prejudice when the jury is accepted at the
    beginning of trial, but objections to any disqualified persons sitting as
    jurors are not waived and provide the defendant a right to a new trial.
    State v. Groome, 
    10 Iowa 308
    , 316 (1860) (“We think it is the duty of the
    State to place twelve legal jurors in the box, and that it is not the duty of
    defendant to inquire whether the jurors are qualified or not.”), overruled
    30
    in part by State v. Pickett, 
    103 Iowa 714
    , 720, 
    73 N.W. 346
    , 347 (1897).
    This idea was expressly overruled in 1897, when we held,
    There is no reason why every party to an action, civil or
    criminal, should not be held to exercise the right given him
    to examine as to the qualifications of jurors called to act in
    his case, and, if he waives that right, to be concluded
    thereby, unless actual prejudice is otherwise shown.
    
    Pickett, 103 Iowa at 720
    , 73 N.W. at 347. Thus, both parties would bear
    the burden of ensuring the jurors were competent to sit on the jury, and
    a juror incompetent due to a conviction would no longer invalidate a
    verdict without the defendant showing that juror’s presence had
    prejudiced the verdict.           
    Id. Unlike with
    testimony impeachment,
    however, some states continue to disqualify jurors based on conviction of
    infamous crime.           See, e.g., Miss. Code Ann. § 13–5–1 (West, Westlaw
    through 2016 Reg. Sess. effective through May 17, 2016) (“Every citizen
    . . . who . . . has not been convicted of an infamous crime . . . is a
    competent juror.”).
    Overall, we left the concept of infamy behind in the context of
    disqualifying a witness from testifying. 14 More recently, we ceased to use
    it to disqualify jurors.       Yet these divergent paths did not change the
    14Significantly,  the 1846 Constitution had provided only that “no person shall
    be . . . rendered incompetent to give evidence in any court of law or equity, in
    consequence of his opinions on the subject of religion.” Iowa Const. of 1846, art. II, § 3.
    In 1857, the following language was added: “[A]nd any party to any judicial proceeding
    shall have the right to use as a witness, or take the testimony of, any other person not
    disqualified on account of interest, who may be cognizant of any fact material to the
    case . . . .” Iowa Const. art. I, § 4. Thus, “interest” seemingly became the only basis for
    disqualifying a witness.
    In fact, the delegates to the 1857 convention voted down an amendment that
    would have authorized “persons convicted of infamous crimes” to be prevented from
    testifying. 1 The Debates of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Iowa 180
    (W. Blair Lord      rep.,  1857),    www.statelibraryofiowa.org/services/collections/law-
    library/iacon/iadeb/condebs. But at the same time, our framers retained the language
    disqualifying persons convicted of infamous crimes from voting.
    31
    definition of infamous crime in the context of voter disqualification, and
    they do not undermine our analytical model of relying on community
    standards of today to define an infamous crime. Prevailing community
    standards remain important in defining infamous crimes, whether those
    standards might serve to exclude some felony crimes from the definition
    or include all felony crimes. Community standards are properly used to
    define constitutional doctrine unless constitutional facts exist that reveal
    the   standards     are      contrary   to    the     intent   and   purpose   of   the
    constitutional doctrine.
    VII. Application.
    As we strive today to identify a standard of infamy, it is clear our
    history reveals the infamous crime disqualification from voting was
    introduced to Iowa as a concept aligned with the common law notion of
    infamy. This common law approach generally identified infamous crimes
    as felonies. See 
    Carter, 1 Greene at 176
    . Yet the concept of infamy was
    not carried forward with a specific or strict definition, but rather as a
    general principle dependent on time for its development. This is what
    history has shown has been taking place from the time the concept of
    infamy originated.        The difficulty today is that the three branches of
    government, and therefore the State of Iowa, have done little to advance
    the concept.
    Our      territorial     legislature        briefly   expressed—and      quickly
    withdrew—the view that infamous crimes included many, but not all,
    crimes that today would be described as felonies. See 1839 Statute Laws
    § 109, at 182; Revised Statutes of the Territory of Iowa ch. 49, class 2,
    § 48, at 137. Then, in 1994, our legislature took the concrete step to
    expound a bright-line standard that infamous crime embraces all
    32
    felonies.   1994 Iowa Acts ch. 1180, § 1 (now codified at Iowa Code
    § 39.3(8) (2013)).
    Under our analytical model, these legislative pronouncements are
    important considerations for us today.        Statutes do not serve as
    constitutional definitions but provide us the most reliable indicator of
    community standards to gauge the evolving views of society important to
    our analysis. State v. Bruegger, 
    773 N.W.2d 862
    , 873 (Iowa 2009); see
    
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 853
    –54 (plurality opinion).        These views are
    particularly invaluable in interpreting the infamous-crime clause in Iowa.
    See 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 854
    .
    The judgment expressed by the legislature in 1994 has additional
    importance in this case in light of the absence of other legislative or
    judicial expressions in our state’s history. For sure, the legislative view
    of infamy has indirectly modified over time as various statutes on crime
    expanded and contracted, but only slightly. For example, sodomy was
    declared by our territorial legislature to be among the infamous crimes in
    1839, and it remained a crime well into the twentieth century.        Iowa
    Code ch. 705 (1977); 1839 Statute Laws § 109, at 182. Today, it is no
    longer a crime—the criminal provision was repealed in 1978. See 1976
    Iowa Acts ch. 1245, ch. 4, §§ 526, 529.     Bigamy was also declared an
    infamous crime in 1839. 1839 Statute Laws § 83, at 173–74; 
    id. § 109,
    at 182. It was punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary, and this
    harsh punishment continued well into the twentieth century. 
    Id. § 83,
    at
    174; Iowa Code § 703.1 (1977). Today, it is only considered a serious
    misdemeanor.     Iowa Code § 726.2 (2013).    Thus, the scope of infamy
    associated with criminal acts has evolved as our view of criminal
    culpability evolved. Yet these modest changes to our view of crime over
    time did not knock the concept of infamy out of line with the concept of
    33
    felony. To the contrary, infamy remained remarkably consistent with its
    historic connection to felonies over the passage of time.
    Moreover, the definition is not out of line with the national view of
    infamy in the context of voter disqualification.                Certainly, no national
    consensus has developed to define infamous crime either more broadly
    or more narrowly than our legislature. As we recognized in Chiodo, many
    states across the nation have included provisions in their constitutions
    to deny people the right to vote when convicted of an infamous 
    crime.15 846 N.W.2d at 855
    . Regarding those states, we observed,
    Some courts have settled on a standard that defines
    an “infamous crime” as an “affront to democratic governance
    or the public administration of justice such that there is a
    reasonable probability that a person convicted of such a
    crime poses a threat to the integrity of elections.” Other
    courts limit the definition to a “felony, a crimen falsi offense,
    or a like offense involving the charge of falsehood that affects
    the public administration of justice.” Still other courts
    establish the standard at crimes marked by “great moral
    turpitude.”
    
    Id. at 856
    (citations omitted) (first quoting Snyder v. King, 
    958 N.E.2d 764
    , 782 (Ind. 2011); then quoting Commonwealth ex rel. Baldwin v.
    Richard, 
    751 A.2d 647
    , 653 (Pa. 2000); and then quoting Washington v.
    State, 
    75 Ala. 582
    , 585 (1884)).
    Some states define infamous crimes using an itemized list of
    crimes, some have adopted versions of the common law definition, some
    limit the definition to felonies—either specific offenses or all felonies—
    and some define it based on the punishment inflicted.                     See, e.g., Ark.
    Code Ann. § 7-1-101(17) (West, Westlaw through 3d Extraordinary Sess.,
    15The    other states that still have suffrage infamous-crimes clauses in their
    constitutions are Indiana, Maryland, New Mexico, New York, Tennessee, and
    Washington. Ind. Const. art. II, § 8; Md. Const. art. I, § 4; N.M. Const. art. VII, § 1; N.Y.
    Const. art. II, § 3; Tenn. Const. art. IV, § 2; Wash. Const. art. VI, § 3.
    34
    90th Ark. Gen. Assemb. in effect May 23, 2016) (felony, misdemeanor
    theft or fraudulent/deceitful act, abuse of office, tampering); Miss. Code
    Ann. § 1-3-19 (offenses punishable          by death or confinement in
    penitentiary); Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-20-112 (West, Westlaw through the
    2016 2d Reg. Sess. effective through Mar. 24, 2016) (any felony with
    infamous adjudication); In re Request of Governor for Advisory Opinion,
    
    950 A.2d 651
    , 653 (Del. 2008) (“[T]he totality of the circumstances in
    each case must be examined before a determination may be made that a
    specific felony is infamous.” (Quoting State ex rel. Wier v. Peterson, 
    369 A.2d 1076
    , 1079 (Del. 1976).)); Cure v. State, 
    26 A.3d 899
    , 913 (Md.
    2011) (“Infamous crimes include treason, common law felonies, and
    other offenses classified generally as crimen falsi.”       (Quoting State v.
    Westpoint, 
    947 A.2d 519
    , 532 (Md. 2008).)).
    Additionally, when a state constitutional provision relating to
    voting or the holding of public office uses the term “infamous crime,” it
    has usually been interpreted to include all felonies. See 
    Washington, 75 Ala. at 585
    (“The presumption is, that one rendered infamous by
    conviction of felony, or other base offense indicative of great moral
    turpitude, is unfit to exercise the privilege of suffrage, or to hold
    office . . . .”); State v. Oldner, 
    206 S.W.3d 818
    , 821 (Ark. 2005) (holding
    “Arkansas courts have consistently recognized that a person convicted of
    a felony or one of the specifically enumerated offenses is disqualified
    from   holding   public   office”   under   a   provision   of   the   Arkansas
    Constitution that applies to persons convicted of “embezzlement of public
    money, bribery, forgery, or other infamous crime” (quoting Ark. Const.
    art. V, § 9)); People ex rel. Keenan v. McGuane, 
    150 N.E.2d 168
    , 176 (Ill.
    1958) (“Accordingly, we conclude that any public officer convicted, in the
    Federal court or in the court of any sister State, of a felony which falls
    35
    within the general classification of being inconsistent with commonly
    accepted principles of honesty and decency, or which involves moral
    turpitude, stands convicted of an infamous crime under the common law
    as interpreted when our constitution was adopted in 1870, and that such
    conviction creates a vacancy in such office.”); State v. Bixler, 
    62 Md. 354
    ,
    360 (1884) (“The Constitution in providing for exclusion from suffrage of
    persons whose character was too bad to be permitted to vote, could only
    have intended, by the language used, such crimes as were ‘infamous’ at
    common law, and are described as such in common law authorities. . . .
    It must be a felony . . . or that which is infamous though it be not a
    felony.”); Mauney v. State ex rel. Moore, 
    707 So. 2d 1093
    , 1095 (Miss.
    1998) (adopting the statutory definition of infamous crime as the
    constitutional definition for disqualification from public office and
    declaring that “ ‘infamous crime’ includes all felonies”); Barker v. People,
    
    20 Johns. 457
    , 460 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1823) (“The law has settled what
    crimes are infamous; they are treason, felony, and every species of the
    crimen falsi, such as perjury, conspiracy and barratry.”); Briggs v. Bd. of
    Cty. Comm’rs, 
    217 P.2d 827
    , 829 (Okla. 1950) (“It is correctly conceded
    that a felony under the laws of this State is an infamous crime.”);
    
    Baldwin, 751 A.2d at 653
    (“[W]e reaffirm that a crime is infamous . . . if
    its underlying facts establish a felony, a crimen falsi offense, or a like
    offense involving the charge of falsehood that affects the public
    administration of justice.”); State v. Collins, 
    124 P. 903
    , 904–05 (Wash.
    1912) (finding that when the defendant was convicted of “breaking jail” in
    Missouri   and   then   charged   with   illegally   registering   to   vote   in
    Washington because he had been previously convicted of an “infamous
    crime,” the information “does not state whether he was then charged
    with a felony or a misdemeanor under the laws either of that state or of
    36
    this [and therefore] [i]t is clear that the information thus failed to state
    facts which under the present law of this state would necessarily
    constitute an infamous crime”); Becker v. Green County, 
    184 N.W. 715
    ,
    717 (Wis. 1921) (“While there has been much debate as to what
    constitutes an infamous crime, we think . . . it is now deemed to mean
    . . . a crime punishable by imprisonment in the state prison.”); Isaacs v.
    Bd. of Ballot Comm’rs, 
    12 S.E.2d 510
    , 511 (W. Va. 1940) (“An offense
    punishable by death or penitentiary confinement is a felony.             And,
    generally, felonies are deemed infamous crimes.” (Citation omitted.)).
    We readily recognize not all courts have interpreted infamous
    crime to include all felonies. In People v. Enlow, the Colorado Supreme
    Court interpreted a Colorado statute declaring a county office vacant
    upon the incumbent’s conviction of an infamous crime. 
    310 P.2d 539
    ,
    541 (Colo. 1957) (en banc).    The court observed that in Colorado, “all
    infamous crimes are felonies, but not all felonies are infamous crimes”
    and determined that federal tax evasion was not an infamous crime. 
    Id. at 544–47.
       However, the court expressly relied on another Colorado
    statute that provided a specific list of infamous crimes that did not
    include tax evasion. 
    Id. at 545–46.
    The situation here is different. We
    are interpreting a constitutional infamous-crime provision that is
    backstopped by a different legislative definition.
    In Wier, the Delaware Supreme Court interpreted a provision of the
    Delaware Constitution banning persons from holding public office who
    had been convicted of “embezzlement of the public money, bribery,
    perjury or other infamous 
    crime.” 369 A.2d at 1078
    n.3 (quoting Del.
    Const. art. 2, § 21).    The court said that “not . . . every felony is
    necessarily a crime of infamy” and “the totality of the circumstances in
    each case must be examined before a determination may be made that a
    37
    specific felony is infamous.” 
    Id. at 1079.
    On the facts, the court found
    that a convicted rapist had committed an infamous crime. 
    Id. In Snyder,
    the Indiana Supreme Court held that “an infamous
    crime is one involving an affront to democratic governance or the public
    administration of justice such that there is a reasonable probability that
    a person convicted of such a crime poses a threat to the integrity of
    
    elections.” 958 N.E.2d at 782
    . In embracing the “affront to democratic
    governance” standard, however, the Indiana Supreme Court relied
    heavily on a 1966 California decision, Otsuka v. Hite, 
    414 P.2d 412
    , 414
    (Cal. 1966) (en banc), abrogated by Ramirez v. Brown, 
    507 P.2d 1345
    (Cal. 1973) (en banc).   See 
    Snyder, 958 N.E.2d at 781
    –82.       Otsuka’s
    analysis was driven by an interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment
    that has since been overruled by the United States Supreme Court.
    Compare 
    Otsuka, 414 P.2d at 422
    –23, with Richardson v. Ramirez, 
    418 U.S. 24
    , 54–55, 
    94 S. Ct. 2655
    , 2671, 
    41 L. Ed. 2d 551
    , 571 (1974).
    In Otsuka, the California Supreme Court limited the scope of
    California’s infamous-crimes provision to crimes involving an affront to
    democratic governance to avoid what it believed was a conflict with the
    Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.         
    Otsuka, 414 P.2d at 422
    –23. However, a few years later, the United States Supreme
    Court undermined the jurisprudential basis for Otsuka when it held that
    felon disenfranchisement is not subject to strict scrutiny because it “has
    an affirmative sanction in s[ection] 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment, a
    sanction which was not present in the case of the other restrictions on
    the franchise which were invalidated in the cases on which respondents
    rely.” 
    Richardson, 418 U.S. at 54
    , 94 S. Ct. at 
    2671, 41 L. Ed. 2d at 571
    .
    In 2011, the Snyder court discussed Otsuka at length and relied on it,
    but without referring to its Fourteenth Amendment underpinnings or
    38
    what happened to those underpinnings in Richardson. See 
    Snyder, 958 N.E.2d at 781
    –82.
    Notwithstanding, no objective evidence exists that the founders of
    our Iowa Constitution adopted or intended to adopt a concept of infamy
    restricted to those crimes that undermine the integrity of the election
    process or any comparable standard, or that our state evolved to
    embrace such a standard at any time in our history.         In Chiodo, we
    indicated infamous crime as a disqualification from voting was a means
    to avoid undermining the integrity of 
    elections. 846 N.W.2d at 855
    –56.
    This observation did not establish a standard, but identified a broad
    rationale for the constitutional provision. See 
    id. A standard
    must still
    exist, and a standard based on felonies is not necessarily inconsistent
    with the rationale of upholding the integrity of elections. The bottom line
    is that throughout history the concept of infamous crime may have
    included crimes in addition to felonies, but it always included felonies or
    crimes that would be classified as felonies today.
    It is also important to observe that in the generation that has
    passed since the 1994 statute, there has been no objective public sign or
    movement to redefine infamy as the disqualifying standard—until this
    case. Even Chiodo came to us as an isolated action by a candidate for
    public office to disqualify his opposing candidate because of a prior
    conviction for the crime of operating while intoxicated.       
    Id. at 847.
    Instead, the public discourse in Iowa since the 1994 legislative
    enactment has essentially been limited to the issue of reinstating voting
    rights after a felon has discharged his or her sentence, as shown by the
    39
    actions of our last three governors. No public action has been formally
    taken to limit the felonies considered to be infamous crimes. 16
    In interpreting our constitution, we must confine our analysis to
    the history we have been given and the evidence and facts as they exist.
    At times, this required approach has allowed us to expand constitutional
    rights beyond what previously existed. See Varnum v. Brien, 
    763 N.W.2d 862
    , 883–84 (Iowa 2009) (finding same-sex and opposite-sex couples to
    be similarly situated for purposes of marriage laws).                 But these times
    occur when the evidence and understanding of today clearly supports the
    result. See 
    id. at 889–96
    (examining evidence regarding homosexuality,
    marriage, and children).
    We observe some evidence from social science professionals and
    other     experts      that     identify     problems       associated       with      the
    disenfranchisement of voters, including convicted felons.                   See Regina
    Austin, “The Shame of It All”: Stigma and the Political Disenfranchisement
    of Formerly Convicted and Incarcerated Persons, 36 Colum. Hum. Rts. L.
    Rev. 173, 182–84 (2004) (discussing the effect of incarceration on the
    voting and political power of ex-offenders, their families, and their
    communities); Atiba R. Ellis, Tiered Personhood and the Excluded Voter,
    90 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 463, 476 (2015) (“[D]isenfranchisement concerning
    formerly incarcerated felons makes those felons unequal to other citizens
    16In 2007, the general assembly adopted new election-related legislation. See
    2007 Iowa Acts ch. 59 (codified in scattered sections of Iowa Code (2009)). This
    legislation provided, among other things, that a voter could be challenged on the ground
    that he or she “has been convicted of a felony, and the person’s voting rights have not
    been restored.” 
    Id. § 1
    2 (codified at Iowa Code § 49.79(2)(f)).
    To the present day, every member of the general assembly must file an affidavit
    of candidacy as a condition of running for office. The affidavit recites that the candidate
    knows she or he cannot run for office if she or he has been convicted of a “felony or
    other infamous crime.” Iowa Code § 43.18(9) (2013).
    40
    within the political community.”); Brian Pinaire, Milton Heumann &
    Laura Bilotta, Barred from the Vote: Public Attitudes Toward the
    Disenfranchisement of Felons, 30 Fordham Urb. L.J. 1519, 1540–41
    (2003) (discussing survey findings of Americans’ attitudes toward the
    voting rights of felons, concluding 81.7% of those surveyed were in favor
    of restoration of voting rights, but noting only 9.9% felt felons should
    never lose the right to vote).    The amici curiae also raised concerns
    regarding the permanent nature of disenfranchisement under the
    constitution, our statutes, and the current administrative restoration
    process. This evidence, however, falls far short of identifying objective
    community standards of infamy and does not illuminate the meaning of
    infamous crimes today.      It also does not carry the weight needed to
    undermine the legislative judgment expressed in 1994 to include all
    felonies as infamous crimes.
    We also observe the presence of a growing movement in our
    country and state that emphasizes the purpose of rehabilitation and the
    need to reintegrate into society those who have served their sentences
    through the restoration of citizenship rights. Yet the restoration of voting
    rights is a different issue from the definition of those crimes that result
    in disqualification and is not before us.
    Finally, we acknowledge that voter disqualification based on
    criminal convictions has a disproportionate impact on voting rights of
    African Americans and perhaps other groups in society.             Yet this
    outcome is tied to our criminal justice system as a whole and is not
    isolated to the use of the infamous-crime standard.        Racial disparity
    must be eliminated in society, but its unwanted presence does not
    necessarily undermine the concept or current definition of infamous
    crime as a standard for voter disqualification.     Moreover, no evidence
    41
    suggests this state adopted or maintained infamy to discriminate against
    minority groups.
    We also reject Griffin’s claim that her crime of conviction is not
    infamous because it was not associated with violence. Infamy has never
    required a violent act. Additionally, the history of Griffin’s crime does not
    support its exclusion from the concept of infamy.                    In fact, it has
    historically been viewed to be a more serious crime.
    The unlicensed, unprescribed sale or other distribution of cocaine
    has been illegal in the State of Iowa since 1902.              See 1902 Iowa Acts
    ch. 110 (codified at Iowa Code §§ 2596-a to -c (1902 Supp.)). In the early
    1900s, cocaine was treated the same as other narcotic drugs and could
    be prescribed for medical purposes by a physician or dentist. Iowa Code
    § 2596-a.      Punishment for violation of the Act—unprescribed or
    unlicensed distribution—only resulted in a fine for a first offense, then
    up to three months in jail for a subsequent offense. 
    Id. § 2596-b.
    The
    punishment changed in 1924, when the regulation of the sale and
    distribution of narcotic drugs was expanded.              See Iowa Code §§ 3151–
    3155, 3168 (1924). At that point, the possession or sale of any narcotic,
    including cocaine, without a prescription or license became a felony and
    was punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary for up to ten years.
    
    Id. §§ 3151–3154,
    3168, 12890.            Moreover, the delivery of cocaine is
    criminal in all fifty states as well as under federal law. 17
    17See  21 U.S.C. § 841; Ala. Code § 13A–12–231 (West, Westlaw through Act
    2016–376 of 2016 Reg. Sess.); Alaska Stat. Ann. § 11.71.030 (West, Westlaw through
    2016 2d Reg. Sess. of 29th Leg.); Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 13-3408 (West, Westlaw
    through legis. effective May 17, 2016 of 2d Reg. Sess. of 52d Leg.); Ark. Code Ann. § 5–
    64–422; Cal. Health & Safety Code § 11352 (West, Westlaw through urgency legis.
    through chapter 22 of 2016 Reg. Sess.); Colo. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 18–18–405 (West,
    Westlaw current through Apr. 22, 2016 of 2d Reg. Sess. of 70th Gen. Assemb.); Conn.
    Gen. Stat. Ann. § 21a–277 to –278 (West, Westlaw through Pub. Acts effective June 7,
    2016); Del. Code Ann. tit. 16, § 4752–4754 (West, Westlaw through 80 Laws 2016,
    42
    Delivery of cocaine is not a new felony, and its classification and
    associated punishment have not been found disproportional to the
    offense committed. Nor is it an offense that is a felony in some states
    _________________________
    chapter 243); D.C. Code Ann. § 48–904.01 (West, Westlaw through May 11, 2016); Fla.
    Stat. Ann. § 893.135(1)(b) (West, Westlaw through chapters from 2016 2d Reg. Sess. of
    24th Leg.); Ga. Code Ann. §§ 16–13–30 and –31 (West, Westlaw through 2016 Reg.
    Sess. of Ga. Gen. Assemb.); Haw. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 712–1241 (West, Westlaw through
    Act 51 of 2016 Reg. Sess.); Idaho Code Ann. § 37–2732 (West, Westlaw through ch. 47
    of 2016 2d Reg. Sess. of 63d Idaho Leg.); 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 570/401 (West,
    Westlaw through P.A. 99–506 of 2016 Reg. Sess.); Ind. Code Ann. § 35-48-4-1 (West,
    Westlaw through 2016 2d Reg. Sess. of 119th Gen. Assemb.); Kan. Stat. Ann. § 21–
    5705 (West, Westlaw through 2016 Reg. Sess.); Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 218A.1412 (West,
    Westlaw through 2016 Reg. Sess.); La. Stat. Ann. § 40:967 (West, Westlaw through
    2016 1st Extraordinary Sess.); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 1103 (West, Westlaw
    through 2015 2d Reg. Sess. of 127th Leg.); Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law § 5–602 (West,
    Westlaw through 2016 Reg. Sess. of Gen. Assemb.); Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 94C,
    § 32A (West, Westlaw through ch. 115 of 2016 2d Ann. Sess.); Mich. Comp. Laws Ann.
    § 333.7401 (West, Westlaw through P.A.2016, No. 146, of 2016 Reg. Sess., 98th Leg.);
    Minn. Stat. Ann. §§ 152.021–.023 (West, Westlaw through 2016 Reg. Sess.); Miss. Code
    Ann. § 41–29–139; Mo. Ann. Stat. § 195.211 (West, Westlaw through 2016 2d Reg.
    Sess. of 98th Gen. Assemb.); Mont. Ann. Stat. §§ 45–9–101, –102 (West, Westlaw
    through 2015 Sess.); Neb. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 28–416 (West, Westlaw through 2d Reg.
    Sess. of 104th Legis.); Nev. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 453.3395 (West, Westlaw through 78th
    Reg. Sess. and 29th Special Sess.); N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 318-B:26 (West, Westlaw
    through ch. 160 of 2016 Reg. Sess.); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:35–5 (West, Westlaw through
    L. 2016, c. 4); N.M. Stat. Ann. § 31–31–20, (West, Westlaw through 2d Reg. Sess. of 52d
    Leg. (2016) in effect by May 18, 2016); N.Y. Penal Law §§ 220.06, .16 (McKinney,
    Westlaw through L. 2016, chs. 1 to 64); N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 90–95 (West, Westlaw
    through 2016–4 of 2016 Extra and Reg. Sess. of Gen. Assemb.); N.D. Cent. Code Ann.
    § 19–03.1–23 (West, Westlaw through 2015 Reg. Sess. of 64th Leg.); Ohio Rev. Code
    Ann. § 2925.03 (West, Westlaw through Files 1 to 77 of the 131st Gen. Assemb. (2015–
    2016)); Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 63, § 2–401 (West, Westlaw through ch. 387 of 2d Reg.
    Sess. of 55th Leg. (2016)); Or. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 475.880 (West, Westlaw through legis.
    effective June 2, 2016 of 2016 Reg. Sess.); 35 Pa. Stat. and Cons. Stat. Ann. § 780–113
    (West, Westlaw through 2016 Reg. Sess. Act 35); R.I. Gen. Laws Ann. § 21–28–4.01
    (West, Westlaw through ch. 32 of Jan. 2016 Sess.); S.C. Code Ann. § 44–53–370 (West,
    Westlaw through 2016 Act No. 167); S.D. Codified Laws § 22–42–2 (West, Westlaw
    through Sess. Laws effective June 30, 2016); Tenn. Code Ann. § 39–17–417; Tex. Health
    & Safety Code Ann. § 481.102 (West, Westlaw through 2015 Reg. Sess. of 84th Legis.
    Reg. Sess.); Utah Code Ann. § 58–37–8 (West, Westlaw through 2015 1st Spec. Sess.);
    Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 18, § 4231 (West, Westlaw through No. 115 of 2015–2016 Gen.
    Assemb. except Act Nos. 103 & 113); Va. Code Ann. § 18.2–248 (West, Westlaw through
    end of 2015 Reg. Sess.); Wash. Rev. Code Ann. § 69.50.401 (West, Westlaw through
    2016 Reg. Sess.); W. Va. Code Ann. § 60A–4–401 (West, Westlaw through 2016 Reg.
    Sess. legis.); Wis. Stat. Ann. § 961.41 (West, Westlaw through 2015 Act 392); Wyo. Stat.
    Ann. § 35–7–1031 (West, Westlaw through 2015 Gen. Sess.).
    43
    and a misdemeanor in others—a difference that might challenge the
    continuing nature of the infamy attaching to offense. Instead, for over
    ninety years it has been and still remains a serious crime in this state.
    Any easing of the societal judgment toward the criminal nature of some
    drugs and some types of offenses remains nebulous, and in no cases we
    could find has the easing extended to cocaine delivery.              It is not
    misplaced within our law as a felony offense.
    Griffin’s remaining challenges to the statutes and regulations
    governing voting and the restoration process were dependent on a finding
    that her conviction did not qualify as an infamous crime.            Since we
    conclude that infamous crime under the constitution means felony
    crime, we need not address these issues.
    Our great advantage as a democracy is found in the clamor of
    debate democracy encourages. See 1 Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in
    America 265–67 (Henry Reeve trans., D. Appleton Co. 1904) (1835). This
    advantage, however, is not always shared equally among all people in all
    issues.   The clamor of debate most often occurs for those issues that
    affect those people with the most powerful voices. Yet all issues need the
    clamor of debate to advance. Moreover, debate is not just needed for the
    politics of democracy. It is also needed by courts when called to interpret
    constitutional doctrine in our evolving world to hear the judgment of the
    legislature, our citizens, social science, and the scientific disciplines.
    In this case, the legislative judgment was clearly expressed, and
    there is no scientific evidence or facts to undermine that judgment. In
    truth, the clamor of debate has largely passed over the issue of
    disqualifying voters in Iowa for a conviction of an infamous crime, and
    courts are unable to move issues forward on their own perceptions of
    infamy in today’s society. In this case, there is insufficient evidence to
    44
    overcome the 1994 legislative judgment, and we must accept it today as
    the standard for infamous crime. It will be up to our future democracy
    to give the necessary voice to the issue and engage in the debate that
    advances democracy.
    In the end, we are constrained to conclude that all objective indicia
    of today’s standard of infamy supports the conclusion that an infamous
    crime has evolved to be defined as a felony.        This is the community
    standard expressed by our legislature and is consistent with the basic
    standard we have used over the years.        It is also consistent with the
    constitutional history, text, and purpose of the provision.
    VIII. Conclusion.
    We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor
    of Secretary of State Pate and Lee County Auditor Fraise and dismissal of
    Griffin’s claim.
    AFFIRMED.
    Waterman, Mansfield, and Zager, JJ., join this opinion. Wiggins,
    J., files a dissenting opinion in which Hecht and Appel, JJ., join. Hecht,
    J., files a dissenting opinion in which Wiggins and Appel, JJ., join.
    Appel, J., files a dissenting opinion in which Wiggins and Hecht, JJ.,
    join.
    45
    #15–1661, Griffin v. Pate
    WIGGINS, Justice (dissenting).
    In Chiodo v. Section 43.24 Panel, I was compelled to dissent from
    the plurality decision. 
    846 N.W.2d 845
    , 863–65 (Iowa 2014) (Wiggins, J.,
    dissenting). In doing so, I made two points. The first was that it is this
    court’s duty and obligation, not the legislature’s, to interpret the meaning
    of the phrase “infamous crime” in article II, section 5 of the Iowa
    Constitution. 
    Id. at 864.
    It appears from the opinions filed today, the
    court agrees with this principle. Today, I reaffirm my position on this
    point of law.
    I also agree with the court’s view that the Iowa Constitution is a
    living document. As we have said numerous times in our jurisprudence:
    [W]e recognize that unlike statutes, our constitution sets out
    broad general principles. A constitution is a living and vital
    instrument. Its very purpose is to endure for a long time
    and to meet conditions neither contemplated nor foreseeable
    at the time of its adoption. Thus the fact a separate juvenile
    court system was not in existence at the time our
    constitution was adopted in 1857 should not blindly
    mandate an absurd result because our forefathers had not
    yet seen fit to establish a separate juvenile court system.
    Sometimes, as here, the literal language must be disregarded
    because it does violence to the general meaning and intent of
    the enactment.
    In re Johnson, 
    257 N.W.2d 47
    , 50 (Iowa 1977) (citations omitted); see
    also State v. Barker, 
    116 Iowa 96
    , 105, 
    89 N.W. 204
    , 207 (1902) (reciting
    these same principles over 100 years ago).
    In my Chiodo dissent, I also expressed unwillingness to deviate
    from our prior caselaw defining “infamous crimes” due to the uncertainty
    it would cause for voters and election officials in this 
    state. 846 N.W.2d at 864
    –65. Today I am prepared to change my position on this point. I
    do so for two reasons. First, Justices Appel and Hecht have set forth
    46
    compelling reasoning and analysis in their opinions concerning how
    voters and election officials can determine who is an eligible voter.
    Additionally, the majority’s analysis is flawed in that it does not truly
    consider the consensus among other states, most of which allow at least
    certain felons to vote.   By focusing solely on our cruel-and-unusual-
    punishment jurisprudence to arrive at its conclusion, the majority’s
    incomplete analysis gives short shrift to a matter concerning individual
    rights. Its approach represents a stark retreat from the robust analysis
    of individual rights under the Iowa Constitution this court traditionally
    applies.   See generally Varnum v. Brien, 
    763 N.W.2d 862
    (Iowa 2009)
    (applying our traditional approach to matters involving individual rights
    under the Iowa Constitution).
    More importantly, the brief of the Polk County Auditor has caused
    me to reevaluate my thoughts on this issue. The Polk County Auditor
    administers the election in the largest and most diverse county in the
    state. In his brief, he states that under a protocol similar to that urged
    by Justices Appel and Hecht, he would be able to implement and
    administer a policy that would ensure all persons with prior felony
    convictions who were eligible to vote could do so.
    For this reason, I cannot join the majority opinion.     Therefore, I
    dissent and join Justices Appel and Hecht in their dissents.
    Hecht and Appel, JJ., join this dissent.
    47
    #15–1661, Griffin v. Pate
    HECHT, Justice (dissenting).
    I do not share the majority’s conclusion that Griffin was convicted
    of an “infamous crime” supporting her disenfranchisement under article
    II, section 5 of the Iowa Constitution or Iowa Code section 39.3(8)
    (2013). 18     I believe an infamous crime that disqualifies a citizen from
    voting must at least feature some nexus to the electoral process.
    Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    The majority concludes Griffin’s 2008 conviction of delivery of 100
    grams     or       less   of   cocaine   in    violation   of   Iowa    Code     section
    124.401(1)(c)(2)(b) (2007), a Class “C” felony, is an infamous crime. 19
    The majority also notes all fifty states criminalize delivery of cocaine and
    the offense is a serious one causing continuing harm to society.
    As the majority correctly observes, the drafters of our constitution
    did not define “infamous” in this context.             The many meanings courts
    and legal scholars assigned to the word over the centuries are well
    documented in the majority’s opinion.                      Although the legislature
    expressed its understanding in 1994 that all felony crimes are infamous
    for purposes of identifying eligible voters, see 1994 Iowa Acts ch. 1169,
    § 7, the task of interpreting the Iowa Constitution falls to this court—not
    18In  addition to her challenge to section 39.3(8) as applied, Griffin contends
    several other statutes regulating election processes—including Iowa Code sections
    43.18(9), 48A.6(1), 48A.14(1)(e), 48A.30(1)(d), 49.79(2)(f) and 57.1(2)(c)—as well as the
    current voter registration forms and related regulations, the Governor’s Executive Order
    70, and related procedures all serve to disqualify persons convicted of noninfamous
    felony offenses as electors and are therefore unconstitutional as applied.
    19Griffin  also has a 2001 conviction for possession of ethyl ether in violation of
    Iowa Code section 124.401(4)(c) (2001), a Class “D” felony. That conviction is not
    relevant in this case because Griffin discharged the sentence in 2006, when Executive
    Order 42 was in force, and Executive Order 70 does “not affect the restoration of rights
    . . . granted prior to” its 2011 effective date.
    48
    the legislature. See Varnum v. Brien, 
    763 N.W.2d 862
    , 875 (Iowa 2009);
    see also Chiodo v. Section 43.24 Panel, 
    846 N.W.2d 845
    , 853 (Iowa 2014)
    (“In the end, it is for the courts to interpret the constitution.”); Peel v.
    Burk, 
    197 N.W.2d 617
    , 622 (Iowa 1972) (Reynoldson, J., dissenting)
    (“This court, not the legislature, is empowered to interpret the
    constitution.”).    “The legislature may not add to or subtract from the
    voter qualifications under the constitution.” 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 852
    ;
    Coggeshall v. City of Des Moines, 
    138 Iowa 730
    , 737, 
    117 N.W. 309
    , 311
    (1908).
    In the plurality opinion in Chiodo, Chief Justice Cady explained
    “the concept of disenfranchisement was not meant to punish certain
    criminal offenders or persons adjudged incompetent, but to protect the
    ‘purity of the ballot box.’ ” 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 855
    (quoting Snyder v.
    King, 
    958 N.E.2d 764
    , 781 (Ind. 2011)). Further explicating the drafters’
    objective in article II, section 5, he wrote,
    Our drafters wanted the voting process in Iowa to be
    meaningful so that the voice of voters would have effective
    meaning. Thus, disenfranchisement of infamous criminals
    parallels disenfranchisement of incompetent persons under
    article II, section 5.         The infamous crimes clause
    incapacitates infamous criminals who would otherwise
    threaten to subvert the voting process and diminish the
    voices of those casting legitimate ballots. As a result, the
    regulatory focus of disenfranchisement under article II
    reveals the meaning of an “infamous crime” . . . looks not
    only to the classification of the crime itself, but how a voter’s
    conviction of that crime might compromise the integrity of
    our process of democratic governance through the ballot box.
    
    Id. at 856.
    I joined the plurality opinion in Chiodo, see 
    id. at 857,
    and I
    continue to believe the animating purpose of the disenfranchisement
    clause is the protection of the voting process and the integrity of the
    institutions   of   democratic    governance.     With   this   fundamental
    understanding of the purpose of the clause, I now turn to the analytical
    49
    framework for deciding whether the district court erred in interpreting
    Iowa Code section 39.3(8) (2013) and article II, section 5 of the Iowa
    Constitution.
    The right Griffin asserts—the right to vote—is a fundamental right.
    Devine v. Wonderlich, 
    268 N.W.2d 620
    , 623 (Iowa 1978); accord 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 848
    (“Voting is a fundamental right in Iowa, indeed the
    nation.”). Voting occupies a “vital role in our system of government by
    providing citizens with a voice in our democracy and in the election of
    those who make the laws by which all must live.” 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 848
    .   Although this right is essential to fulsome participation in self-
    government, it is not absolute.      
    Id. at 849.
       Because the right is
    fundamental, we must apply strict scrutiny in deciding Griffin’s claim. A
    law that impedes a fundamental right is unconstitutional if it is not
    narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government interest.      Santi v.
    Santi, 
    633 N.W.2d 312
    , 317 (Iowa 2001). In my view, disenfranchising
    voters for class “C” felony drug offenses will not advance the integrity of
    elections or institutions of government. Indeed, I am not convinced that
    Griffin’s conviction for delivery of cocaine or her subsequent exercise of
    the right to vote will tend to threaten or subvert the voting process; nor
    will it diminish in any untoward manner the voices of other voters.
    I further conclude section 39.3(8) and the related statutes
    disenfranchising all felons fail to pass strict scrutiny analysis because
    the classification of all felonies as infamous crimes is not narrowly
    tailored to serve any legitimate purpose of the disqualification clause.
    The statute’s definition of infamous instead sweeps broadly past those
    crimes which might be plausibly understood to diminish the integrity of
    the voting process or the integrity of democratic institutions of
    governance, and it disenfranchises persons—like Griffin—whose criminal
    50
    conduct is completely unrelated to any legitimate nonpunitive and
    protective purpose of the disqualification clause.
    Our strict scrutiny of the statutory framework disenfranchising
    Griffin and others similarly situated cannot be driven by majoritarian
    preferences about the propriety of disqualifying all felons as electors.
    Given the fundamental nature of the right to vote, we should not deny it
    to Griffin just because most folks favor disenfranchisement of all felons;
    neither should we deny her the right because “that is the way it’s always
    been in Iowa” or because “that’s the way it’s done elsewhere.”           Our
    scrutiny must instead confront the hard question of whether there is a
    compelling governmental interest in disenfranchising her for drug-related
    offenses. In my view, there is not.
    The notion that allowing Griffin to vote will render the ballot box
    impure, disrupt the electoral process, or damage institutions of
    democratic governance is fanciful at best. I posit there is no legitimate
    basis for concluding Griffin’s vote will have any such adverse effects; and
    precluding her vote will, in my view, advance no compelling government
    interest.   Her disenfranchisement instead seems to rest on the notion
    that allowing convicted felons who have discharged their sentences to
    vote   “will   taint   the   body     politic.”   Mary   Sigler,   Defensible
    Disenfranchisement, 
    99 Iowa L
    . Rev. 1725, 1730 (2014) [hereinafter
    Sigler]. But that notion is misguided because it relies on the “mystical
    claim” that all felons are tainted and therefore will somehow infect the
    entire electoral process, see George P. Fletcher, Disenfranchisement as
    Punishment: Reflection on the Racial Uses of Infamia, 46 UCLA L. Rev.
    1895, 1899 (1999), and because it is “a call for retribution with no
    tangible benefit,” Mark Haase, Civil Death in Modern Times: Reconsidering
    51
    Felony Disenfranchisement in Minnesota, 
    99 Minn. L
    . Rev. 1913, 1933
    (2015) [hereinafter Haase].
    In reaching my conclusion that section 39.3(8) and the related
    statutes relied upon by the respondents in denying Griffin access to the
    polls fail to serve a compelling government interest, I am aided by
    “constitutional facts,” including public policy arguments. See 
    Varnum, 763 N.W.2d at 881
    , 898–906 (analyzing “all of the material tendered by
    the parties,” including public policy arguments, to assist in the review of
    the constitutionality of a statute); 
    Santi, 633 N.W.2d at 318
    –19
    (considering whether a law “strengthen[ed] extended familial bonds” or
    caused “family disruption” in deciding a constitutional challenge to a
    statute).   I have also considered the societal impact of denying the
    franchise to those convicted of noninfamous crimes. See 
    Varnum, 763 N.W.2d at 881
    (noting “judicial decision-making in the context of
    constitutional issues” may require courts to analyze facts beyond those
    relating to the parties and their particular circumstances, including
    “social, economic, political, or scientific facts”).
    Following the issuance of Executive Order 70, more than 14,000
    Iowans were disenfranchised in almost four years. See Editorial, No Vote
    for   Iowa’s    Felons,    Cedar     Rapids     Gazette   (Dec.   7,   2014),
    www.thegazette.com/subject/opinion/staff-editorial/no-vote-for-iowas-
    felons-20141207 (reporting that from January 2011 to December 2014,
    “roughly 14,500” Iowans completed their sentences after committing a
    felony, but fewer than 100 regained their voting rights). Because many
    of these disenfranchised felons—like Griffin—were convicted of crimes
    having no relationship to the integrity of the electoral process or other
    democratic institutions, I believe a negative societal impact has occurred.
    Voting encourages persons to become informed about and involved in
    52
    their communities’ civic affairs—behaviors that maximize the chances of
    rehabilitation for those convicted of crimes.        Disqualification, on the
    other hand, stigmatizes felons and undermines their reintegration to
    society by treating them as second-class citizens even after they have
    served their prison sentences. See, e.g., Atiba R. Ellis, Tiered Personhood
    and the Excluded Voter, 90 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 463, 477 (2015)
    (“[D]isenfranchisement creates a permanent underclass of citizenry
    whose interests are not heard . . . with no hope of ever effectively
    reengaging with society.”); Sigler, 
    99 Iowa L
    . Rev. at 1739 (“[P]ermanent
    exclusion of offenders, certainly those already released from prison, is
    tantamount to political exile and inconsistent with the rights and
    responsibilities of citizenship . . . .”); Howard Itzkowitz & Lauren Oldak,
    Note, Restoring the Ex-Offender’s Right to Vote: Background and
    Developments, 11 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 721, 732 (1973) (“The offender finds
    himself released from prison, ready to start life anew and yet at election
    time still subject to the humiliating implications of disenfranchisement
    . . . . Denying him the right to vote forbids his participation in the most
    crucial function of a democratic society—the electoral process—and is
    likely to reaffirm feelings of alienation and isolation, both so detrimental
    to   the    reformation   process.”).        Some   evidence   even    suggests
    disenfranchisement is associated with increased crime rates.                See
    Christopher Uggen & Jeff Manza, Voting and Subsequent Crime and
    Arrest: Evidence from a Community Sample, 36 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev.
    193, 213 (2004) (collecting data and concluding “a relationship between
    voting and subsequent crime and arrest is . . . supported by empirical
    evidence”); see also Hadar Aviram & Jessica L. Willis, Reintegrating
    Citizens:   Felon   Enfranchisement,     Realignment,    and   the    California
    Constitution, 27 J. C.R. & Econ. Dev. 619, 652–53 (2015) (discussing two
    53
    studies); Haase, 
    99 Minn. L
    . Rev. at 1927 (“The evidence shows that
    disenfranchisement does not deter crime or lower recidivism.           Public
    safety is thus not advanced and may actually be undermined by felony
    disenfranchisement.”).
    Disenfranchisement of noninfamous felons also tends to depress
    the votes of others. The propensity of young people to vote is correlated
    with their parents’ behavior and resources.          Eric Plutzer, Becoming a
    Habitual Voter: Inertia, Resources, and Growth in Young Adulthood, 96
    Am. Pol. Sci. Rev. 41, 42–43 (2002).                 Accordingly, a parent’s
    disenfranchisement tends to discourage voting by other family members.
    See Christopher Haner, Felon Disenfranchisement: An Inherent Injustice,
    26 J. C.R. & Econ. Dev. 911, 917 (2013) [hereinafter Haner] (“Individuals
    who are not disenfranchised . . . , especially those with parents who have
    suffered disenfranchisement, may not feel that voting is important or
    may feel that it is a useless exercise of political power because they do
    not see the fruits of exercising this right.”); see also Erika Wood,
    Restoring   the   Right   to   Vote   12   (2009),   www.brennancenter.org/
    sites/default/files/legacy/Democracy/Restoring%20the%20Right%20to
    %20Vote.pdf.
    When disproportionate numbers of citizens in the same community
    are denied the right to vote, the political power of the community’s
    residents—including those who have never been convicted of a crime—is
    weakened. See Aman McLeod et al., The Locked Ballot Box: The Impact of
    State Criminal Disenfranchisement Laws on African American Voting
    Behavior and Implications for Reform, 11 Va. J. Soc. Pol’y & L. 66, 77–78
    (2003) (collecting voter turnout data, comparing it among states, and
    concluding “mean voter turnout . . . is statistically lower in states with
    moderately to extremely restrictive disenfranchisement laws”); Reuven
    54
    Ziegler, Legal Outlier, Again? U.S. Felon Suffrage: Comparative and
    International Human Rights Perspectives, 29 B.U. Int’l L.J. 197, 208
    (2011) (“[E]xpelling the convict from the community fails to recognize that
    she remains a community member.”); see also Haner, 26 J. C.R. & Econ.
    Dev. at 917 (“If a neighborhood has a large number of citizens living in it
    who are disenfranchised, the community loses power . . . .”).
    I am persuaded that disenfranchising persons convicted of
    noninfamous offenses has other deleterious social consequences. It is a
    component of the “otherness” observed by one commentator, promoting a
    separation between community members and law enforcement officers.
    See William Stuntz, The Collapse of American Criminal Justice 310–12
    (2011).   As a result, the effectiveness of community policing may be
    undermined,     especially    in   communities     with   high   rates   of
    disenfranchisement. Cf. 
    id. I emphasize
    here my purpose is not to diminish the gravity of
    Griffin’s felony conviction, for which she has been sentenced and
    punished. I merely conclude continuing to disenfranchise her for that
    conviction serves no compelling government interest. Because I believe
    Griffin’s disenfranchisement undermines the government’s compelling
    interest in her rehabilitation and reintegration to society after her
    sentence was discharged, I would reverse the district court and remand
    for entry of a judgment declaring Griffin’s 2008 criminal conviction does
    not render her presumptively ineligible to vote.
    Wiggins and Appel, JJ., join this dissent.
    55
    #15–1661, Griffin v. Pate
    APPEL, Justice (dissenting).
    The   majority    does   its   best    to   interpret   an   anachronistic
    constitutional provision in the modern context. It is not an easy task.
    For the reasons expressed below, I come to a different conclusion than
    the majority. I believe the term “infamous crime” in article II, section 5 of
    the Iowa Constitution does not sweep so far as to disqualify Griffin from
    voting. As a result, I respectfully dissent.
    In this case, Griffin has fully satisfied the demands of the criminal
    law as enacted by the Iowa legislature and she has been discharged from
    the criminal justice system. In colloquial terms, she has paid her debt to
    society and returned to normal life. The question here is whether the
    Iowa Constitution permits the legislature to prohibit all felons—
    regardless of the nature of the underlying crime—from exercising the
    fundamental right to vote after the criminal sanctions imposed as a
    result of conviction have been fully satisfied.
    The question is determined by our interpretation of article II of the
    Iowa Constitution dealing with the right of suffrage. Article II, section 1
    generally provides that every citizen who is a resident of the state “shall
    be entitled to vote at all elections.” Iowa Const. art. II, § 1. More than a
    hundred years ago, we stated that the right to vote is “a political right of
    the highest dignity.”   Coggeshall v. City of Des Moines, 
    138 Iowa 730
    ,
    737, 
    117 N.W. 309
    , 312 (1908).              More recently, the United States
    Supreme Court has said, “It is beyond cavil that ‘voting is of the most
    fundamental significance under our constitutional structure.’ ” Burdick
    v. Takushi, 
    504 U.S. 428
    , 433, 
    112 S. Ct. 2059
    , 2063, 
    119 L. Ed. 2d 245
    ,
    252 (1992) (quoting Illinois Bd. of Elections v. Socialist Workers Party, 
    440 U.S. 173
    , 184, 
    99 S. Ct. 983
    , 990, 
    59 L. Ed. 2d 230
    , 241 (1979)).
    56
    Yet article II, section 5 of the Iowa Constitution disqualifies from
    voting persons “adjudged mentally incompetent to vote” or “convicted of
    any infamous crime.” Our task is to determine the boundary between
    the powerful, general command of article II, section 1—vesting the right
    to vote in every citizen—with the exception provided in article II, section
    5—disqualifying persons convicted of infamous crimes from voting. See
    Hutchins v. Hanna, 
    179 Iowa 912
    , 916, 
    162 N.W. 225
    , 227 (1917) (“[I]n
    interpreting the Constitution, the court should consider all matter in pari
    materia; and all provisions on the same subject matter shall, if possible,
    be given effect.”).
    This case involves three questions.          First, what branch of
    government decides where the boundary lies between these two
    provisions? Second, what substantive standards should the responsible
    branch of government use is placing the boundary? Third, how should
    the standards be applied in the case of Griffin?
    In answering the first question—which branch of government is
    responsible for deciding where the boundary lies—I begin with analysis of
    the text of article II, section 5 and the historical context surrounding its
    development.     The “infamous crimes” language of article II, section 5
    arose from the Iowa Constitution of 1846. Iowa Const. of 1846, art. III,
    § 5. Prior to 1846, however, a number of state constitutions expressly
    vested the power to determine what crimes disqualified persons from
    voting in their legislatures.    For example, the Indiana Constitution of
    1816 provided, “The general assembly shall have full power to exclude
    from electing, or being elected, any person convicted of any infamous
    crime.” Ind. Const. of 1816, art. VI, § 4; see Snyder v. King, 
    958 N.E.2d 764
    , 774–75 (Ind. 2011).        Similarly, the Illinois Constitution of 1818
    stated, “The General Assembly shall have full power to exclude from the
    57
    privilege of electing or being elected any person convicted of bribery,
    perjury or any other infamous crime.” Ill. Const. of 1818, art. II, § 30.
    The Missouri Constitution of 1820 also provided that “[t]he general
    assembly shall have power to exclude . . . from the right of suffrage, all
    persons convicted of bribery, perjury, or other infamous crime.”        Mo.
    Const. of 1820, art. III, § 14.   The Rhode Island Constitution of 1842
    expressly vested in its legislature power over suffrage, stating, “Nor shall
    any person convicted of bribery, or of any crime deemed infamous at
    common law, be permitted to exercise that privilege, until he be expressly
    restored thereto by act of the General Assembly.” R.I. Const. of 1842,
    art. II, § 4.
    Like the state constitutions of Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, and
    Rhode Island, the proposed Iowa Constitution of 1844 explicitly vested
    the general assembly with the power to regulate the franchise. Under the
    proposed Iowa Constitution, persons were disqualified from voting when
    their crimes were declared “infamous by act of the legislature.”       Iowa
    Const. of 1844, art. III, § 5. In the Iowa Constitution of 1846, however,
    the legislature no longer had a role in determining disqualification of
    voters related to infamous crimes.       The power of the legislature was
    deleted, and instead, article III, section 5 simply stated that persons
    “convicted of any infamous crime” were disqualified.        Iowa Const. of
    1846, art. III, § 5.
    Against the historical backdrop, I conclude that the deletion of
    legislative authority in article III, section 5 should be given its intended
    effect. The determination of which crimes might qualify as infamous for
    purposes of disqualification from suffrage rests with the court, not with
    the general assembly.    The plurality in Chiodo v. Section 43.24 Panel
    came to the right conclusion on this issue. 
    846 N.W.2d 845
    , 855 (Iowa
    58
    2014) (“[I]t appears the drafters at our 1857 constitutional convention
    intended to deprive the legislature of the power to define infamous
    crimes.”).
    I now turn to the second question: What standard should the court
    apply to determine which crimes are infamous?               This is a difficult
    question, as the term “infamous crime” is famously ambiguous. As noted
    by the Supreme Court of Missouri in 1858, the term “infamous” is of
    “indefinite import.” Birch v. Benton, 
    26 Mo. 153
    , 159 (1858). In Chiodo,
    the plurality correctly noted that “[a]ny definition of the phrase ‘infamous
    crime’ has vast implications and is not easy to 
    articulate.” 846 N.W.2d at 856
    .      If there is any agreement in this case, it is that the term
    “infamous crime” is ambiguous.
    Yet the overall textual context may narrow the range of interpretive
    options for ambiguous terms and phrases. Specifically, the drafters of
    the Iowa Constitution of 1846 distinguished between the terms
    “infamous     crimes”    and   “felonies.”   In   several   places,   the   Iowa
    Constitution used the term “felony.” In article III, section 2 the framers
    used the language “treason, felony, or breach of peace.” Iowa Const. of
    1846, art. III, § 2.    The same phrase is used in article IV, section 12,
    which prevented representatives and senators from being arrested when
    serving at the General Assembly for all but those crimes. Iowa Const.
    art. IV, § 12.
    But the framers did not use the term “felony” in article II, section 5
    of the Iowa Constitution of 1857. If the 1846 and 1857 framers wished
    to disenfranchise all felons, they could have said so. We have often said
    that when a legislative body uses different terms in an enactment we
    assume different meanings are intended. Johnson v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    756 N.W.2d 845
    , 850 (Iowa 2008), superseded by statute on other grounds,
    59
    2009 Iowa Acts ch. 116, § 1; Miller v. Marshall County, 
    641 N.W.2d 742
    ,
    749 (Iowa 2002). Since the framers rejected the term “felony” as the test
    for voter disqualification, it would be doubly odd to allow the rejected
    term to be reinserted as a result of legislative action, particularly when
    the constitutional drafters eliminated the role of the legislature in
    defining infamous crimes.
    Further, other state constitutions use the term “felony” to
    disqualify voters. See, e.g., Del. Const. of 1831, art. IV, § 1 (“[N]o . . .
    person convicted of a crime deemed by law felony, shall enjoy the right to
    an elector . . . .”); Minn. Const. of 1857, art. VII, § 2 (“[N]o person who
    has been convicted of treason, or any felony . . . shall be entitled or
    permitted to vote at any election in this State.”).     Iowa simply chose
    different language.
    To me, the text and related history make it quite clear that the
    court must determine the meaning of the term “infamous crimes” and
    that the term is not synonymous with “felony.” This, of course, is not the
    end of the matter, but only a good beginning. Having determined that
    the responsibility is vested with the courts to determine the meaning of
    infamous crimes and that infamous crimes are not the equivalent of
    felonies does not decide the question before us. While all felonies are not
    infamous crimes, does Griffin’s felony conviction of delivery of cocaine
    qualify as an infamous crime under article II, section 5?
    I now turn to the functional context, which may help bring an
    ambiguous term into clearer focus. In some circumstances, the context
    in which a general term is used will cause us to give it a narrow
    interpretation. See Des Moines Flying Serv., Inc. v. Aerial Servs., Inc., ___
    N.W.2d ___, ___ (Iowa 2016) (declaring “[c]ontext is king” in interpretation
    of an U.C.C. provision); U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n v. Lamb, 
    874 N.W.2d 112
    ,
    60
    119 (Iowa 2016) (interpreting “all liens” to mean all judgment liens based
    on context); Iowa Ins. Inst. v. Core Grp. of Iowa Ass’n for Justice, 
    867 N.W.2d 58
    , 72 (Iowa 2015) (giving a narrow interpretation to the broad
    phrase “all information” based on context).    These cases stand for the
    commonsense proposition that general phrases with potentially broad
    application may be given a narrow interpretation when the context of the
    phrase so requires.
    The question is thus not free-standing or abstract.      Instead, as
    noted by Professor LaFave, the meaning of the term “infamous crime”
    may “depend, to a large extent, on the purpose for which the distinction
    is to be made.” 1 Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 1.6(d),
    Westlaw (database updated Oct. 2015) [hereinafter LaFave]; see also 21
    Am. Jur. 2d Criminal Law § 23 (2016) (“The meaning of the term
    ‘infamous crime’ may vary according to the context in which it arises
    . . . .”). The specific question here is the meaning of the term “infamous
    crime” in the context of the constitutional disqualification of a citizen
    from the fundamental right to vote as an elector.
    I take the lesson of these cases and authorities and apply them
    here. For instance, in the context of entitlement to presentation before a
    grand jury under the Fifth Amendment, the term “infamous crime” turns
    on the length of punishment. Ex parte Wilson, 
    114 U.S. 417
    , 425–26, 
    5 S. Ct. 935
    , 939, 
    29 L. Ed. 89
    , 92 (1885).           A completely different
    approach, however, has been taken to the definition of infamous crime in
    the context of competency of a person to testify.      In this context, an
    infamous crime is determined not by the length of punishment, but on
    the nature of the crime. See, e.g., Palmer v. Cedar Rapids & Marion Ry.,
    
    113 Iowa 442
    , 447, 
    85 N.W. 756
    , 758 (1901) (“It is well settled that in
    determining whether the crime . . . is an infamous crime, which will
    61
    disqualify him from testifying, the nature of the crime, and not the
    punishment which may be inflicted therefor, is the test.”); 1 Charles F.
    Partington, The British Cyclopeadia of Literature, History, Geography,
    Law, and Politics 847 (1836) (“A third ground of incompetency is infamy
    of character. . . . It is not sufficient that a party has been convicted and
    punished for a crime; nor that the punishment itself is deemed by the
    public degrading and infamous. But the offense must, in its own nature,
    be infamous.”).    Here, the question is whether a crime is considered
    infamous in the context of disqualification as an elector.
    In several of our prior cases, we assumed that Wilson’s treatment
    of infamous crime in the context of grand jury indictment provided the
    proper framework for evaluating the meaning of the term in the context
    of voter disqualification. 114 U.S. at 
    429, 5 S. Ct. at 941
    , 29 L. Ed. at
    93. For instance, in Blodgett v. Clarke we considered whether a person
    who had been convicted of forgery was eligible to run for a position on
    this court, which was then an elected position. 
    177 Iowa 575
    , 578, 
    159 N.W. 243
    , 244 (1916) (per curiam), overruled by 
    Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 852
    . Citing Flannagan v. Jepson, 
    177 Iowa 393
    , 399–400, 
    158 N.W. 641
    ,
    643 (1916), which in turn cited Wilson, we held that because forgery was
    subject to imprisonment in the penitentiary, it would be considered an
    infamous crime. 
    Blodgett, 177 Iowa at 578
    , 159 N.W. at 244. But the
    cut-and-paste job transferring the holding of Wilson into the different
    contexts of voter qualification or qualification to hold office, as the Chiodo
    plurality pointed out, is not 
    persuasive. 846 N.W.2d at 851
    .
    In considering the meaning of infamous crime in the context of
    voter disqualification, Professor LaFave concludes that the meaning
    should track the meaning of the term in the context of competency of
    62
    witnesses rather than the context of grand jury indictment.         1 LaFave
    § 1.6(d). According to Professor LaFave,
    Where the purpose was in former times to render a witness
    incompetent (or today to authorize the impeachment of the
    witness), the term “infamous” properly has reference to those
    crimes involving fraud or dishonesty or the obstruction of
    justice (sometimes called crimen falsi). Where the term is
    used in connection with disbarment or disqualification to
    hold office, vote or serve on a jury, it generally has a similar
    meaning.
    
    Id. Professor LaFave
    cites Snyder in support of his approach.           
    Id. § 1
    .6(d) n.80. In Snyder, the Indiana Supreme Court concluded that the
    term “infamous crime” was not synonymous with felony for purposes of
    the infamous crimes clause of the Indiana 
    Constitution. 958 N.E.2d at 771
    . The Snyder court reasoned that the definition of infamous crime
    rests upon the context in which it is used. 
    Id. at 777.
    The Snyder court
    recognized that in the context of qualification of witnesses, the focus is
    on the nature of the crime itself and not the punishment. 
    Id. at 778.
    The Snyder court rejected the proposition that all modern felonies are
    infamous, noting that under traditional Indiana evidence law, only nine
    classic common law offenses were considered infamous.             
    Id. at 779.
    Similarly, infamous crimes under Iowa evidence law traditionally were
    treason, crimen falsi, and felonies at common law. Carter v. Cavenaugh,
    
    1 Greene 171
    , 176 (Iowa 1848).
    The   Snyder    court    noted     that   the   Webster’s    dictionary
    contemporaneous with the enactment of the Indiana Constitution defined
    infamous as “most vile; base; 
    detestable.” 958 N.E.2d at 780
    (quoting
    Noah Webster, A Dictionary of the English Language 202 (rev. ed. 1850)).
    For the Indiana court, the question was what crimes could be considered
    “most vile; base; detestable” in the context of the purpose of the
    63
    constitutional provision disqualifying persons convicted of infamous
    crimes. 
    Id. The purpose
    of the constitutional provision, according to the
    Snyder court, was “to preserve the integrity of elections.” 
    Id. at 782.
    In
    order for a crime to be infamous under the regulatory constitutional
    provision, there had to be a nexus between the crime and the regulatory
    purposes of the statute. 
    Id. Infamous crimes,
    for the purpose of voter
    disqualification, thus were those crimes involving “an affront to
    democratic governance or the public administration of justice such that
    there is a reasonable probability that a person convicted of such a crime
    poses a threat to the integrity of elections.”              
    Id. The Snyder
    court
    concluded that there was no such nexus between the crime at issue—
    battery—and protection of the “integrity of the election process.” 
    Id. at 782–83.
    The Snyder court cited the California case Otsuka v. Hite, 
    414 P.2d 412
    (Cal. 1996) (en banc), 20 in support of its 
    holding. 958 N.E.2d at 781
    –82.     In Otsuka, the California Supreme Court considered whether
    conviction of failure to register for selective service amounted to an
    infamous crime sufficient to disenfranchise the voter under the California
    
    Constitution. 414 P.2d at 414
    .             Significantly, the disqualification
    provision in the California Constitution was nearly identical to article II,
    section 5 of the Iowa Constitution and in all likelihood was actually
    20The  California Supreme Court overruled Otsuka in Ramirez v. Brown, 
    507 P.2d 1345
    , 1353 (Cal. 1973). In Ramirez, however, the California Supreme Court overruled
    Otsuka not because it went too far in protecting the right to vote, but because it did not
    go far enough. 
    Id. The Ramirez
    court ruled that the California constitutional provision
    violated federal equal protection because it imposed undue burdens on the right to vote.
    
    Id. Ramirez was
    then overturned on appeal by the United States Supreme Court.
    Richardson v. Ramirez, 
    418 U.S. 24
    , 56, 
    94 S. Ct. 2655
    , 2671, 
    41 L. Ed. 2d 551
    , 572
    (1974). Because of Otsuka’s unique procedural history, the Snyder court’s reliance on
    its reasoning remains apt.
    64
    based upon the Iowa constitutional provision since the delegates to the
    1849 California constitutional convention had the Iowa Constitution as a
    model. See J. Ross Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of
    California 24 (1850) (reporting that every member of the convention was
    provided a copy of the Constitution of Iowa to “take into consideration
    . . . as a basis for the Constitution of California”).
    The Otsuka court distinguished between infamous crimes for
    purposes of determining when charges must be brought before the grand
    jury and infamous crimes for purposes of determining the competency of
    a person to 
    testify. 414 P.2d at 421
    . The Otsuka court held that the
    purpose of disqualification was to prevent “morally corrupt and dishonest
    voters [who] . . . may reasonably be deemed to constitute a threat to the
    integrity of the elective process.” 
    Id. at 422
    (emphasis added). Finding no
    threat to the elective process, the Otsuka court determined that
    conviction for selective service crimes should not be considered infamous
    under the constitutional provision. 
    Id. at 425.
    Turning to the proper approach to the Iowa Constitution, I begin
    with the proposition that the disqualification provision of article II,
    section 5 should be narrowly construed for two reasons. First, the right
    to vote is fundamental to the democratic process, and as noted by the
    Chiodo plurality, abridging the right to vote “must be carefully and
    meticulously 
    scrutinized.” 846 N.W.2d at 856
    (quoting Devine v.
    Wonderlich, 
    268 N.W.2d 620
    , 623 (Iowa 1978)). Second, article II, section
    5 is a forfeiture provision. The law has traditionally construed forfeiture
    provisions in a narrow fashion. See, e.g., In re Wagner, 
    482 N.W.2d 160
    ,
    162 (Iowa 1992); In re Kaster, 
    454 N.W.2d 876
    , 877 (Iowa 1990); 3A
    Norman J. Singer & Shambie Singer, Statutes and Statutory Construction
    § 68:5, at 340 (7th ed. 2010).
    65
    Based on the above considerations, I conclude that the approach
    in Snyder is the correct 
    one. 958 N.E.2d at 779
    , 782–83.       Infamous
    crimes, for purposes of article II, section 5, are those that undermine the
    integrity of the election process. As suggested by LaFave, these infamous
    crimes are crimen falsi—crimes where the honesty and integrity of the
    convicted person is drawn in question, or crimes that interfere with the
    electoral process. See 1 LaFave § 1.6(d).
    I now turn to the final question: the application of the standard to
    this case. I think it is clear that Griffin’s drug crimes do not qualify as
    crimen falsi or crimes that interfere with the electoral process. No one
    would seriously argue that Griffin—who was placed on probation after
    her conviction and now has fully discharged her sentence—poses any
    threat to the integrity of the electoral process or that allowing her to vote
    threatens the administration of justice. Further, her crime was certainly
    not treason or common law felony. 
    Carter, 1 Greene at 177
    . I would
    thus find that Griffin was not convicted of an infamous crime and that
    she is entitled to exercise the fundamental right to vote of every citizen
    under article II, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution.
    I close with some observations on the implications of this case
    pointed out by amici who filed helpful briefs in this case. As pointed out
    by the briefs of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the
    League of Women Voters, the history of voter disqualification has
    disturbing features.     In southern states after reconstruction, voter
    disqualification on the grounds of being convicted of infamous crimes
    was used as a tool to prevent African Americans from voting. Indeed, the
    Mississippi Supreme Court candidly explained that the purpose of its
    constitutional provision prohibiting persons from voting based on
    conviction of various offenses was to “obstruct the exercise of the
    66
    franchise by the negro race.”      Ratliff v. Beale, 
    20 So. 865
    , 868 (Miss.
    1896). In 1985, the Supreme Court held that Alabama’s constitutional
    provision disenfranchising persons convicted of a crime of moral
    turpitude violated equal protection under the United States Constitution.
    Hunter v. Underwood, 
    471 U.S. 222
    , 233, 
    105 S. Ct. 1916
    , 1922, 
    85 L. Ed. 2d 222
    , 231 (1985). The Hunter Court concluded that the crimes
    selected for inclusion as crimes of moral turpitude “were believed by the
    delegates to be more frequently committed by blacks.” 
    Id. at 227,
    105
    S. Ct. at 
    1919, 85 L. Ed. 2d at 227
    .
    While there is no allegation of intentional discrimination in this
    case, the amici point out that felony disenfranchisement has grossly
    disproportionate effects on African American males. Researchers at the
    Sentencing Project estimate that approximately twenty-five percent of
    African American males in Iowa are disenfranchised by the legislature’s
    implementation of article II, section 5. R.A. Lenhardt, Understanding the
    Mark: Race, Stigma, and Equality in Context, 79 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 803, 918–
    19 (2004) (citing The Sentencing Project & Human Rights Watch, Losing
    the Vote: The Impact of Felony Disenfranchisement Laws in the United
    States 8 (1998)).      The exclusion of ex-felons in Iowa has produced a
    disenfranchisement rate for African Americans in Iowa that is “more than
    triple” the national rate.       The Sentencing Project, Iowa and Felony
    Disenfranchisement         2      (2005),       https://web.archive.org/web/
    20131019085622/http://www.sentencingproject.org/doc/publications/
    fd_iowa.pdf.
    The   amici   further   point    out   that   disproportionate   voter
    disenfranchisement does not simply impact the individual, but penalizes
    the communities from which wrongdoers come and reduces their political
    clout.    As noted by the League of Women Voters, “[o]ne of the most
    67
    prominent and consistent finding[s] in [the] literature is that [felony
    disenfranchisement] laws produce a disproportionate effect on black
    communities.”     See Melanie Bowers & Robert R. Preuhs, Collateral
    Consequences of a Collateral Penalty: The Negative Effect of Felon
    Disenfranchisement Laws on the Political Participation of Nonfelons, 90
    Soc. Sci. Q. 722, 723 (2009).
    Another amicus points out that veterans of America’s recent wars
    suffer from posttraumatic stress syndrome that can lead to felony
    convictions, which, in context, should not be considered so infamous as
    to lead to lifetime voter disqualification and the resulting stigma. Today’s
    decision, of course, provides little comfort to them.
    Further, it is not clear exactly what policies are actually advanced
    by voter disenfranchisement. As noted in Dillenburg v. Kramer, “[c]ourts
    have been hard pressed to define the state interest served by laws
    disenfranchising persons convicted of crimes.” 
    469 F.2d 1222
    , 1224 (9th
    Cir. 1972).    Given the lack of a compelling state interest and the
    fundamental individual interests involved, the American Bar Association
    recommended in 1981 that “[p]ersons convicted of any offense should not
    be deprived of the right to vote either by law or by the action or inaction
    of government officials.”       Andrew L. Shapiro, Challenging Criminal
    Disenfranchisement Under the Voting Rights Act: A New Strategy, 103 Yale
    L.J. 537, 560 (1993) (quoting ABA Standards for Criminal Justice: Legal
    Status of Prisoners 23—8.4, at 145 (2d ed. 1981)).            Further, the
    American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code states that “a person who is
    convicted of a crime shall be disqualified . . . from voting in a primary or
    election if and only so long as he is committed under a sentence of
    imprisonment.” Model Penal Code § 306.3(1), 10A U.L.A. 751 (2001).
    68
    The majority opinion leaves a couple avenues of redress for those
    seeking to vote after fulfilling their criminal sanctions. Relief through the
    exercise of the gubernatorial power is a possibility, but there is no
    constitutional requirement that the governor establish an administrative
    process for restoring voting rights. Further, all administrative processes
    involve burdens of some kind, some slight, others more substantial.
    Another avenue of change, of course, is a constitutional amendment.
    But for now, the majority opinion endorses a very broad
    interpretation of the disqualification provision of article II, section 5 of
    the Iowa Constitution that will disqualify thousands of Iowans from
    exercising the fundamental right to vote after they have fully satisfied
    their criminal sentences, even without a showing of nexus of the crime to
    the integrity of the electoral process.      The likelihood is that those
    convicted of felonies who have fully served their sentences will have their
    rights subject to flip-flopping executive orders depending upon the
    political philosophy of the executive rather than upon a more stable legal
    regime. Sadly, that is exactly what ensnared Griffin into the law’s web
    after she completed her criminal sentence.
    Wiggins and Hecht, JJ., join this dissent.