There are three amendments regarding who is allowed to vote:
- The 15th amendment gave all races the right to vote.
- The 19th amendment gave women the right to vote.
- The 26th amendment reduced the voting age to 18.
There was no law saying woman could not vote, they were merely excluded from the group that the Constitution and later amendments deemed able to vote.
No. The Bill of Rights is the First 10 Amendments to the Constitution. The amendment concerning a woman's right to vote is the 19th Amendment.
There are ten amendments in the bill of rights
171 amendments
Well there are three "amendments" that go with voting ( the 1st ten amendments are called the bill of rights) They are, * Being 18 or older to vote that is amendment #26 (isn't a bill of right) * Being a woman 18 or older and being able to vote is amendment #19 * No poll taxes on voting
Citizens eighteen and over can vote.
Constitutional amendments must be ratified by the votes of 3/4 of the State Legislatures. There is no requirement for a plebiscite, or vote of the people. Each State Legislature can, if it chooses, base its decision on a popular vote, but I'm not aware that any do.
any citizen can vote
They allowed people to vote.
The 14th and 15th amendments of the Constitution of the United States
the way the amendments demonstrate the ability of the constitution to adapt to in attitude about who should vote is by doing it.
a two thirds vote of congress
There is no amendment that states woman can't vote.
Twenty-third
There are 27 amendments to the constitution. The last one passed in 1971 when the right to vote was changed from 21 to 18.
There are 27 amendments to the Constitution to date.That is how many amendments there are to the US Constitution but the truth is that every proposition that has been passed and put on the ballot to vote on is an amendment so there have been many but it is my understanding there are somewhere around 600 so far.
Amendments can be ratified by Legislatures of 2/3 of the states. Amendments can be proposed by 2/3 vote of each house of Congres.