Supporters of ending ‘slavery’ in Kentucky line up behind Lexington lawmaker’s bill

Republished from Kentucky Lantern
FRANKFORT — During the six and a half years Savvy Shabazz spent incarcerated in nine Kentucky institutions, he worked for as little as 63 cents a day.
Now, he and others are pushing for an amendment to modernize Kentucky’s Constitution, which currently permits slavery and indentured servitude for people convicted of crimes.
Ratified in 1891, Chapter 25 of Kentucky’s Constitution states that “slavery and involuntary servitude in this state are forbidden, except as a punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.”
“The presence of the slavery clause and involuntary servitude in Kentucky’s Constitution perpetuate a painful legacy of oppression and dehumanization,” Shabazz, whom Gov. Andy Beshear pardoned in 2020, said Tuesday during a Frankfort press conference.
“It serves as a stark reminder of a dark chapter in our nation’s history when the fundamental rights of certain individuals like myself was systematically denied based on race,” Shabazz said.

Rep. George Brown Jr., D-Lexington, has introduced a bill to strike that “except” clause through a constitutional amendment.
“The 13th Amendment abolished slavery for all intents and purposes,” Brown said, “but slavery still continues.”
‘We’ve never been in a state without slavery’
Patricia Gailey with Abolish Slavery Kentucky said the slavery clause causes many negative effects.
It can “filter up through the system, creating destruction of health, exploitation of resources, exploitation of labor, destruction of family, destruction of self agency, destruction of dignity, corruption, inhumane conditions, unsafe conditions, PTSD, increase in addictions, recidivism, all kinds of things that we don’t really want,” she said.
Shabazz has lived this, he said. Doing demolition work in Louisville for 60 cents a day put him at risk of long-term fallout, he said.
“Part of reentry into our society is to make sure that we are prepared to take care of ourselves and our families. So pay us a livable wage,” he said. “What happens if I lose a limb while building or working inside of the institution? How will I take care of myself and my family once I’m released? If we’re really talking about reentry, we have to remove that involuntary servitude and slavery clause and do what’s right in Kentucky.”
He sees Brown’s House Bill 121 as a “segue” into larger prison reform because, he said, “we don’t want to be a slave state.”
Kentucky always has been, Gailey said. “We’ve never been in a state without slavery… without involuntary servitude,” she said. “From day one, prior to our first Constitution, this state has been a slave state. We need to change that.”
About 37,000 Kentuckians are behind bars, according to Prison Policy Initiative data. The majority — 19,000 — are in state prisons. PPI data shows Black Kentuckians and Kentuckians of color are over-represented in detention.
Kentucky is about 9% Black and 87% white, according to the United States Census Bureau. But prison populations are 21% Black and 76% white; prisoners in jails are 18% Black and 79% white, according to PPI.
Could the 2025 legislation be successful?
Brown said he’s yet to have conversations with Republican lawmakers about the legislation, but hopes to do so when the legislature reconvenes next week to finish the 2025 session.
“My hope is that we’ll have conversation with those members across the aisle,” he said. “This is the 21st century. The 13th Amendment was filed or passed, adopted, in 1865. Do the math as to how many years we’re talking about.”
Should the General Assembly pass the bill, voters would need to weigh in next year.
EJ was in middle school when he entered Kentucky Juvenile Justice
Kentucky voters have a mixed record on changing the Constitution. In 2022 they struck down a proposed amendment that would have stated that there’s no right to an abortion in Kentucky’s Constitution. In 2024, they voted against another proposed amendment that would have opened a path for the Republican-controlled legislature to allow state dollars to flow to nonpublic schools, such as private or charter schools.
They did, however, approve an amendment that further prohibits people who are not U.S. citizens from voting in Kentucky elections that same year.
Brown filed this legislation in 2024, as well, and only Democrats signed on as cosponsors. It didn’t get assigned a committee, making it effectively dead on arrival.
Brown hopes for Republican cosponsors this year — and a committee hearing. So far his only other cosponsor is Rep. Beverly Chester-Burton, D-Louisville.
Gailey urged lawmakers to take the Constitution’s wording seriously.
“What other words in our Constitution are thought to be so insignificant that we could set that aside? None,” she said. “We’re talking about crimes against humanity here in our state. Until we remove this clause, because it’s in our Constitution, we are all complicit in crimes against humanity, and I’m not OK with that, and I think that our conscientious lawmakers, if they stop to think about it, they would not be okay with that either. We need to move this legislation forward, and we need to do it now.”
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