there is no upper age limit
21 or older
Only British citizens who are permanent residents of France at the time of a presidential election are entitled to vote. Only French expatriate citizens are entitled to vote overseas in Britain.
You are eligible to vote in the US when you turn 18. If you can vote in a presidential election, you may be eligible to vote in the primary, even if you are 17.
21 years old. Not until 1971 did it change to 18.
to vote for anything that has to do with the government, you have to be at least 18 years old
The first U. S. Presidential election after people born in 1956 were of legal voting age was the election of 1976.
26th AmendmentIt is the amendment that allows us citizens over the age of 18 vote in elections. such as the presidential election, the election for governor, and any other election that rely on citizens to vote on.
Nope, just the ones who are residents at the time of the French elections.
Yes, any U.S. citizen over the age of 18 can register to vote. In a primary or caucus vote you may only vote within your party but in the Presidential election you may vote for either party's candidate.
Any one over the age of 18 can vote in a general election.
Only if you're of legal voting age, are eligible to vote and are registered. Some states allow registration at the polling place just prior to voting.
It's not at all inevitable. Self-reporting to the US Census Bureau indicates that those aged 18 to 20 are among the most likely age groups to vote in a presidential or congressional election, averaging approximately 56% in presidential elections since 1996. Those aged 21 to 24 are typically the least likely to vote in either type of election, averaging 35.4% in presidential elections since 1996... Still far from an inevitability of not voting.