The study of the voting records of American Indians would fall under the field of political science, specifically focusing on the subfield of American politics or Native American politics. It may also overlap with areas such as ethnic studies or indigenous studies, depending on the specific research questions and approach.
American Center for Voting Rights ended in 2007.
succeeded in winning voting rights for women
grandfather clauses
the voting rights act of 1965
Susan B. Anthony
social sciences
Laughlin McDonald has written: 'American Indians and the fight for equal voting rights' -- subject(s): Suffrage, Indians of North America, Government relations, History 'American Indians and the fight for equal voting rights' -- subject(s): Indians of North America, Suffrage, Government relations, History
Native americans/ American Indians
American Center for Voting Rights ended in 2007.
I would turn it around - how can we get congress to vote the way the people want? and how can i get records of which congressmen are voting the way opinion polls go, and which ones are defying us or voting just on party lines?
Voting records only show whether or not someone voted in an election. The votes themselves are anonymous when entered. Voting records are private but they may be examined should voter fraud be suspected but only by members of the board of elections in the questioned jurisdiction.
because they wanted to increase repubilcan voting
The District of Columbia is the only city in the United States that does not have a voting representative in Congress. Other territories of the United States that has non-voting representatives in Congress include Guam, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the Virgin Islands.
How did the Kansas legislators vote on Oct 16, 2013
The American Revolution did not end property qualifications for voting. However, the ratification of the US Constitution in 1789 did.
Jacksonian democracy actually excluded these groups from voting rights. Andrew Jackson's presidency promoted the expansion of suffrage to white males regardless of property ownership, but did not extend voting rights to blacks, Native Americans, or women. This period was characterized by increased political participation and the rise of the common man in American politics.
There are a few different electronic voting technologies. Some of which include using punch cards, optical scan voting system or a specialized voting kiosk which is slowing gaining popularity.