Canada is an example of a country that helps prisoners get voting rights; Voting in penitentiaries has been in practice since 2002, when the Supreme Court of Canada ruled it is a constitutional right in this democracy. In the elections, Canada has set up polling stations at federal prisons across the country, to facilitate the democratic process for more than 22,000 eligible voters who are incarcerated and under community supervision. In the last election in 2011, voter turnout was 54 per cent in federal prisons, not far behind the 61 per cent in the general population. "Everybody has an opinion. There's a lot of discussion, and I believe it's like that in every unit. It's actually pretty big on the inside, as far as who to vote for, why, who," Jason Wisdom, who is serving a life sentence for first-degree murder at Ontario's Beaver Creek institution. "A lot of guys haven't voted before they came to prison, like myself, but now I would say about 80 per cent of the guys here want to vote and want to have a