What the legislatures do is write these laws giving YOU the option to surrender those rights. Should you choose to commit a crime that's a felony, YOU gave up your rights, not any legislature.
I have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. If I rob a bank and they put me in a cage like an animal, they did not take away my rights to liberty, I surrendered those rights when I decided to rob a bank.
Wrong.
The legislature has the delegated authority to defend the rights of others only.
It does not have the authority to commit taxation without representation.
If you allow government to do that, then you are authorizing a dictatorship that could simply make voting a privilege for the wealthy elite only.
The American Revolution was mostly about taxation without representation, and it is inherently criminal.
No legal government can do it.
And NO ONE can EVER surrender rights.
They are INHERENT.
All that government can do is what is necessary in order to defend the rights of others.
So you can be caged like an animal.
But if on probation, then clearly you no longer are a threat to the rights of anyone.
So there is no legal basis for not allowing the inherent right of representation.
The Founders would NEVER have allowed any legislation to take away inherent rights like voting.
Only a criminal would even consider it.