Apathy, no faith in the candidates or the system as a whole.
It is no longer necessary to be a man in order to have the right to vote. It is also not necessary to be a white person in order to vote in the United States.
yes becasue it change the way people think. i think that it made a BIG DIFFERENCE IN AMERICA WHAT DO U GUYS THINK=) =) Women were given the right to vote because we deserve the same rights as a man and are equal to men just as any of the human race is, we are all equal to one another.
amendment 15
ze black man e woman
Well some people think it's because a man should do it cause its proper but i think women have the right to do it to. i agree very strongly to that answer i think wemon should exercise that right more sighned (a guy)
You do not HAVE to vote, in America, you may choose to vote, for it is one of man's common rights. we fought to achieve independence, and to be able to pick our leaders, not have whatever crazy so called "royal" idiot tumbles out the throne. But as Many of us say here, if you are able to vote, but you don't, you have no right to complain about who wins. In addition to voting for leaders, you vote for laws, what you think of them and if you think its something that needs to be done. the American government cares about its people, and wonders what they think of the laws and clauses passed, so there is always a vote for the laws.
There was no "national movement " for the right to vote. In the 13 colonies a man had to own land, be white, and over 21 to vote. African Americans got the right in 1867, but Jim Crow laws prevented voting until the 1965 voting rights act. Women got the right in 1920 with the 19th amendment.
A woman had the same rights as a man, except for the right to vote and the right to stand for public office.
The 19th amendment of the U.S. Constitutions guarantees that all women shall have the right to vote. All men and women shall be created equal.
the right to vote
Why not? Same reason other countries let women vote. We have every bit as much right to vote as any man does. We're affected by politics and government too.
Universal manhood suffrage -during the 1830s when Andrew Jackson was president, most states loosened their property requirements and embraced the principle that every man had the right to vote, regardless of whether he owned property or not.