The rights of suffrage have come a long way since when voting first began. When voting first began only white‚ land-owning‚ males could vote. After many years and the efforts of many people‚ voting in the United States is open to anyone over the age of 18‚ except convicted felons. This privilege has now been taken for granted by many people‚ because they don’t think that their vote would change anything‚ or they just don’t want to vote. Some people think the only way to solve this problem is to legally
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The “Right” to Vote “We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain - that this nation‚ under God‚ shall have a new birth of freedom - and that government of the people‚ by the people‚ for the people‚ shall not perish from the earth.” ~ Gettysburg 1963. Abraham Lincoln spoke these words on November 19‚ 1863. Amongst the bloodiest war in American history and the possible destruction of the union that are for fathers worked so hard to build‚ he thought of the people. He thought
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redetermine the limits of voting rights. Each change was made to increase certain rights and decrease inequality‚ whether it was about race‚ color‚ gender‚ and age. Therefore‚ after the civil
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1.) A.) One law passed by Congress that made discriminatory voting requirements such as poll taxes‚ the grandfather clause‚ and voting laws illegal was the Voting Rights Act of 1965. This act made it illegal and attempted to stop the discriminatory requirements and tests. The act prohibited states from imposing “voting qualification‚ prerequisite to voting‚ or standard‚ practice‚ or procedure…to deny or abridge the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color”. B
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“Felons Rights of the Voting Process “ Nearly six million American citizens are unable to vote due to a past criminal conviction . More than 2 percent of the adult populationis banned from voting because of a felony conviction .(nytimes.com) Convicted felons should be able to vote after they have served their time in jail because they have paid their debt to society‚ and everyone makes mistakes which makes no one perfect . There is a lot downhill that is going on and a violation of human
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The Voting Rights Act of 1965‚ originally designed as a temporary emergency measure‚ quickly suspended the use of all literacy tests‚ as well as good character requirements. Congress believed that enacting the voting rights act was necessary because it enforced the pre-existing 15th and 19th amendments. As President Lyndon B. Johnson stated after signing the voting rights act on August 6th‚ that day was “a triumph for freedom as huge as any victory that has ever been won on any battlefield”. Not
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Why voting right should be reformed College students are among the largest group of people that would be affected most by the new voting rights laws. Most college students enter college at age seventeen so once it’s time to go to the polls they would just be turning eighteen which is the age you are allowed to vote. That seem as if it wouldn’t be a problem but a lot of college students go out of state for college so the new voting right act would make it difficult for them to register to vote
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Allowing Prisoners Voting Rights For many years‚ the decision to allow prisoners to vote has been a wide spread controversial issue. The controversy has been popular in the United States and the United Kingdom. When prisoners are sent to prison they are there to serve their time and they are usually stripped of all their rights and no longer contribute to a functional society. This includes the right to vote. They are convicts‚ but does that make it okay to take their rights entirely? Some may
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The Voting Rights Act of 1965 & What Led To It As I sit down and analyze the events that had significance in the time period that was covered in our class‚ I continue to be amazed at the authorization of The Voting Rights Act in 1965. Its substance not only had such a tremendous impact on many citizens during that time‚ but it has continued to be a critical component in our government still till this day. For almost fifty years it has been amended and restructured to improve voting rights. The
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Voting Rights in America 12 Oct‚ 2005 The United States of America has come a long way from the original 13 colonies. They started out as a colony governed by a Monarch from England‚ switched to a republic at the start of the revolution and today we still have that republic base in our democracy. Although the way how the government hasn’t changed much‚ the way how we vote does. At first only the rich and powerful were able to vote‚ but in present day America‚ any legal US resident of age not in
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