The U.S. constitution does not prevent convicted felons from holding the office of the President or a seat in the Senate or House of Representatives. States may prevent convicted felons candidates from holding statewide and local offices.
Statistics are shown for this demographic
Voting for candidate
Response rates from 2.1k Logroño voters.
22% Yes |
78% No |
7% Yes |
71% No |
10% Yes, as long as it was not a felony, violent, financial, or sexual crime |
7% No, and disallow politicians that are under investigation for a crime |
4% Yes, as long as they have finished serving their sentence |
|
1% Yes, as long as the crime was not committed while in office |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 2.1k Logroño voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 2.1k Logroño voters.
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Unique answers from Logroño voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@9DH9M4T1yr1Y
If the crime is a felony then no.
@8VFV5S73yrs3Y
No, disallow politicians that are under investigation for a crime until proven innocent.
@9C7RZ6X1yr1Y
It depends on the crime (stealing a chocolate bar at 7 years of age is not the same as stealing billions of euros)
@9978VLH2yrs2Y
Yes as long as they have served the sentences and been completely honest about it