The 15th Amendment, ratified in 1870, prohibits the denial of the right to vote based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude, but it does not explicitly address eligibility to hold public office. As a result, while it aimed to protect voting rights for African American men, many were still denied the right to hold public office through discriminatory laws and practices, such as literacy tests and poll taxes, primarily in Southern states. Consequently, the amendment did not guarantee that those who could vote would also have access to political positions.
No amendment guarantees the right to vote. There are three that say who cannot be "denied" the right to vote, by reason of race, or gender, or age.The 15th amendment : men cannot be denied the right because of their raceThe 19th amendment : women cannot be denied the vote because of gender.The 26th amendment : those citizens 18 years of age cannot be denied the vote because of their age.
The 19th amendment A+
An atheist cannot be denied the right to hold office. Religion and state are top be kept separate.
The 19 Amendment.
the Fifth Amendment states that you cannot be denied of your right to property without due legal process
6th amendment
Fifteenth Amendment-Shay
15th amendment
15
race
A specific right of a full citizen of Rome that was not granted to partial citizens was the right to hold public office.
The 19th Amendment covers that right.