Although there has been much dispute over it, the constitution does in fact guarantee all American citizens the right to vote. Throughout the founding document, voting rights are mentioned numerous times. In the Fifteenth Amendment, “the right to …show more content…
“For example, the First Amendment prohibits Congress from making laws infringing on religious freedom and our freedom of speech, it does not say, "all citizens have the right to freedom of speech and religion". But, you would not say that it does not guarantee those freedoms. This shows that the constitution can guarantee a right without explicitly stating it and effectively proves that argument invalid.
State law further supports our constitutional right to vote. In the absence of a specific federal law, states have the ability to establish qualifications for suffrage and candidacy within its own jurisdiction. “Forty-nine states explicitly grant the right to vote through specific language in their state constitutions such as “shall be entitled to vote.” (Source B) These state constitutions, like the federal one, grant the right to vote to its citizens by qualifying