no of course not
Washington, D.C. does not have a representative per se. Only states are allocated congressmen. Washington, D.C. and U.S. territories do have non-voting delegates. Washington, D.C. has one such delegate.
A+ TrueUnder the articles of confederation each state had only one cotes regardless of its population. Some states had 3 or 4 delegates but they still only got one vote.
Citizens of the US Virgin Islands cannot vote in Presidential nor Congressional elections; however they are allowed to elect one House representative, although that member can only participate in discussion and is not allowed to vote. Those citizens can become eligible to vote by becoming a registered citizen of one of the 50 states.
sir Robert borden allowed women the right to vote.
No one
Yes, the District has one congressional district. But its representative is not allowed a vote on the floor of the House of Representatives.
The law didn't allow them to vote. At one time only landowners could vote and women were not allowed to own land. It all changed after World War 1
Most people (>95%) were from the Third Estate.
George Washington- The only president elected unanimously. All 69 electors voted for him in 1789, and all 132 electors voted for him in 1792.
No. In 1800 and 1900 Iraq was part of the Ottoman Empire. No one was allowed to vote.
By today's standards, the Constitution wasn't very democratic because it only allowed males to vote. But, for the time, the Constitution was very democratic. Even though it only allowed white landowning men the right to vote, and not women or black slaves, it still allowed a huge percent of its population to vote. Yet the new charter also contained democratic elements. Above all, it stood foursquare on two great principles of republicanism: that the only legitimate government was one based on the consent of the governed, and that the powers of government should be limited.
No one is allowed to vote in Saudi Arabia. Sometimes the women are allowed though!!