The states
In simple words 1870slaves, as such, never did get the right to vote. But at the close of the Civil War they were all formally freed under the 13th Amendment to the Constitution (Bill of Rights), which abolished slavery in 1865. Former slaves were then granted the right to vote in 1870, under the 15th Amendment, which decreed that the right to vote could not be denied because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
No
Probably to keep the power with the people... so they could vote for the individual with the most influence with our military.
19th amendment
It made more states want to vote and sign for the Constitution
the states
State
No. It is a privilege, not a right or a duty.
The constitution states that a person who is 18 years old and a citizen of the United States can vote.
citizens that are over 18 years of age
No. The Constitution only uses the gender neutral "people" or "person" and never specifically mentions either sex, male or female. The Constitution was thus phrased to apply equally to both women and men.Contrary to common opinion, women were not denied the right to vote by the original Constitution--the individual states were left to determine their own requirements for voting. It was at the state level that women were unconstitutionally denied their right to vote. The states lost the power to exclude citizens from voting on the basis of sex with the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920.
When the constitution was written white men who owned land and were 21 could vote.
the three more important aspect of the Constitution are limitation of power, rights to citizens, and the ability to vote.
It is illegal under an amendment to the federal constitution to charge a fee to vote in a federal election.
No, it wasn't until the 19th Amendment to the Constitution in 1920 that women were granted suffrage.
No. That is not given as one of his powers in the constitution.
NO. there is no "no confidence" votes under the American Constitution. That is only under a parlamentary system