Women, African-Americans, and Native Americans
Because they have no good reason not to
No. Women got voting rights from the 19th amendment. the 14th stated that no one could be denied citizenship because of race, religion, etc. (used to give African Americans citizenship).
All women and people whose parents were not born inside the city were denied citizenship in ancient Athens.. Different laws were replaced, changed, added and deleted as the city advanced.
Citizens were freeborn land owning males who were 21-years-old and older, both of whose parents were Athenian. Everyone else was denied citizenship.
The Constitution of 1836 was the Constitution of the Republic of Texas. It denied citizenship to African-Americans and Native Americans.
Women, African-Americans, and Native Americans
With Congress' passage of the Indian Citizenship Act, the government of the United States confers citizenship on all Native Americans born within the territorial limits of the country. Before the Civil War, citizenship was often limited to Native Americans of one-half or less Indian blood. In the Reconstruction period, progressive Republicans in Congress sought to accelerate the granting of citizenship to friendly tribes, though state support for these measures was often limited. In 1888, most Native American women married to U.S. citizens were conferred with citizenship, and in 1919 Native American veterans of World War I were offered citizenship. In 1924, the Indian Citizenship Act, an all-inclusive act, was passed by Congress. The privileges of citizenship, however, were largely governed by state law, and the right to vote was often denied to Native Americans in the early 20th century.
Because they have no good reason not to
If a naturalized citizen was found to have gained citizenship by fraud, the citizenship can be revoked and possibly deported; a naturalized citizen is not qualified to run for the office of president of the US.
It depends on the reason you were denied.
No. Women got voting rights from the 19th amendment. the 14th stated that no one could be denied citizenship because of race, religion, etc. (used to give African Americans citizenship).
Native Americans were unable to vote in the United States for much of the country's history because they were not considered citizens and were often denied the right to vote due to discriminatory laws and policies.
All women and people whose parents were not born inside the city were denied citizenship in ancient Athens.. Different laws were replaced, changed, added and deleted as the city advanced.
The Slaughterhouse Cases decision limited the scope of the 14th Amendment's Privileges or Immunities Clause, which weakened the impact of the Dred Scott decision that had denied rights and citizenship to African Americans. The Slaughterhouse Cases contributed to the narrowing interpretation of the 14th Amendment, which affected the legal rights of formerly enslaved individuals.
African Americans were used as slaves, discriminated against because white people didnt treat them as equal. Native Americans because they were forced to move west in "the trail of tears" because that one white president was greedy and discriminated against them
If there was never an order, this probably won't affect your citizenship application.