No.
Black people have always been able to vote
Not well, the minorities weren't aloud to vote because the test to vote would be if you could read and the majority of them couldn't.
Women can vote as well as men in France, but it is true that there are less female representatives in parliament or public life. People from minorities can vote on the basis of a French citizenship.
Yes, women have been able to vote in Kenya since 1963.
Men have always had the right to vote. In the early colonies the requirements were that they own land in the colony, but after the Constitution was signed this was dropped and men (expect black men) could vote.
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
No. Syrians have not been able to vote since the implementation of Emergency Martial Law in 1967.
Women and First Nations.
As long as they were born in the United States, or were naturalized, Hispanics (or Latinos) have never been prevented from voting in the way that Blacks and Native Americans were.
Minority rights are rights of minorities that cannot be taken away by a vote of the majority.
In Arizona, I was able to vote in the presidential election at 18...that would have been 1972.
No. It has always been English.