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Q: Could Eighteen year old citizens can vote in all federal elections?
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What was the name of the two groups of citizens who could vote in elections in the Roman rebuplic?

All Romans citizens could vote. The Roman social orders were: patricians, equites and plebeians.


When could women across Canada vote in federal elections?

1917 or maybey 1918


How did the supreme court ruling in citizens united v FEC affect campaign funding and spending?

it weakened campaign finance laws by ruling that corporations and unions could not be prohibited from running ads, and that corporations could spend an unlimited amount on federal elections


Citizens eighteen years or older received a constitutional right to vote in part because?

they could be drafted into the military at that age.


Can a civil court judge say you have to leave the state?

For citizens, no, never. That would be an infringement on federal citizenship in the USA which grants all citizens the right to be present in any state of the union. For non citizens, the federal government could restrict the an alien to certain states under its authority to regulate immigration. However, the federal government and/or a judge, state or federal, could only do so if Congress enacted a law providing for this. And only for non-citizens.


How did article III of the constitution contradict chief justice taney's conclusion that African Americans whether slave or free could not bring suits in federal courts?

Under the Constitution, the federal courts have jurisdiction over a number of kinds of suits involving state citizens. Since Dred Scott's case involved citizens of different states, the chief justice could have said that free blacks in states that considered them citizens could bring certain cases into federal courts.


Why are the citizens of Puerto Rico reluctant vote for statehood?

The fact that they have gotten very little federal help since the hurricane and they are citizens of the United States could be one reason. With statehood they would also paying federal taxes while today they don’t.


What is one way Americans can participate in their Democracy?

There are many ways Americans can participate in their democracy. Three of these are: voting in Federal, State and local elections; running for office in Federal, State, or local elections; and communicating with our elected representatives concerning matters important to us.


What is the full meaning of ubs?

Could be University Board of Elections


What is 26 Amendment?

The Twenty-sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads:Section 1. The right of citizens of the United States, who are eighteen years of age or older, to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of age.Section 2. The Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.The Twenty-sixth Amendment was proposed on March 23, 1971, and ratified on July 1, 1971. The ratification period of 107 days was the shortest in U.S. history. The amendment, which lowered the voting age from twenty-one to eighteen, was passed quickly to avert potential problems in the 1972 elections.The drive for lowering the voting age began with young people who had been drawn into the political arena by the Vietnam War. Proponents argued that if eighteen-year-olds were old enough to be drafted into military service and sent into combat, they were also old enough to vote. This line of argument was not new. It had persuaded Georgia and Kentucky to lower the minimum voting age to eighteen during World War II. The one flaw in the argument was that women were not drafted and were not allowed to serve in combat units if they enlisted in the armed forces.Nevertheless, the drive for lowering the voting age gained momentum. In 1970 Congress passed a measure that lowered the voting age from twenty-one to eighteen in both federal and state elections (84 Stat. 314).The U.S. Supreme Court, however, declared part of this measure unconstitutional in Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U.S. 112, 91 S. Ct. 260, 27 L. Ed. 2d 272 (1970). The decision was closely divided. Four justices believed Congress had the constitutional authority to lower the voting age in all elections, four justices believed the opposite, and one justice, Hugo l. black, concluded that Congress could lower the voting age by statute only in federal elections, not in state elections.The Court's decision allowed eighteen-yearolds to vote in the 1972 presidential and congressional elections but left the states to decide if they wished to lower the voting age in their state elections. The potential for chaos was clear. Congress responded by proposing the Twenty-sixth Amendment, which required the states as well as the federal government to lower the voting age to eighteen.


voting and the twenty fourth amendment ?

After the Civil War, some southern states created poll taxes — or fees charged in order to vote — as a way to bypass the Fifteenth Amendment. Since many African American citizens could not afford to pay the tax, they were unable to vote. The Twenty-Fourth Amendment outlawed poll taxes in federal elections.


What court cases are relevant to the 24Th amendment?

HARMAN V. FORSSENIUS (1965) -- US Supreme Court : The citizens could either pay a poll tax or file for a certificate of residency six months before the federal elections. The verdict: Forced Virginia to abolish its poll tax completely.