Individuals under the age of 18 are disqualified from voting. In some states felons are disqualified from voting however other states allow felons to vote after their sentence is served.
So long as you're not legally disqualified from owning a firearm, yes.
In the state of Illinois people who are incarcerated for a felony can't vote. They will have the ability to vote once they have served their sentence.
The Missouri Compromise helped resolve the voting balance between the south and the north.So Missouri was admitted as a slave and Maine was admitted as a free state.
All persons convicted of felonies are excluded from voting in the US. (Unless they have their rights restored.)
Well yes; one who is not knowledgeable about our government. one has to be 18 and has to be a citizen of the u.s. one cannot be a ex criminal depending on the state one may live in. and the most basic qualification of them all is that one has to register before voting.
Stephen Douglas won only 12 electoral voting (Missouri and a part of New Jersey) and 849,781 popular votes.
To vote in Russia, you must: be a citizen of Russia be 18 years of age You are disqualified from voting for: legal incompetency imprisonment following criminal conviction
So he or she will not get disqualified (ask how does a musher get disqualified)
we'll it counts as a Odonata Minh that will set you back
Michelle Mccool was disqualified not natalya.
you CAN get disqualified by taking people out, looking behind you and distracting other riders.