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Chapter 6:1: Voting and Voting Behavior
• Jos_24:15 And if it seem evil unto you to serve the LORD, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.
Chapter 6:1: Voters and Voter Behavior:
o We will summarize the history of
voting rights in the U.S.
o We will identify and explain
constitutional restrictions on the
State’s power to set voting
qualifications.
The History of Voting Rights:
o The framers of the Constitution
purposely left the power to set
suffrage qualifications to each
State.
o Suffrage means the right to vote.
o Franchise means for the right to
vote.
The History of Voting Rights:
o When the Constitution went into
effect, in 1789 the right to vote was
generally restricted to White male
property owners.
o Today the size of the American
electorate, the potential voting
population is more than 230 million
people, nearly all citizens who are at
least 18 years of age qualify to vote.
Two Trends That Extend Suffrage:
o The gradual elimination of several restrictions on the right to vote; such as race, gender, and property ownership.
o Second, a significant share of what was originally the State’s power over the right to vote was gradually assumed by the Federal government.
Extending Suffrage: The Five Stages:
o (1) Early 1800s, religious
qualifications disappeared.
o By 1810 no state had a religious
test for voting.
o Then one by one, states began to
eliminate property ownership and
tax payment qualifications.
Extending Suffrage: The Five Stages:
o (2) Electorate broadened after the Civil War.
o The 15th Amendment ratified in 1870 intended to protect any citizen from being denied the right to vote because of race or color.
o Still for nearly another century African Americans were barred from voting and were the largest group of disenfranchised citizens or citizens denied the right to vote.
Extending Suffrage: The Five Stages:
o (3) 19th Amendment prohibited
the denial of the right to vote
because of gender.
o Its ratification in 1920 completed
the third expansion of suffrage.
Extending Suffrage: The Five Stages:
o (4) Fourth extension, in the 1960s
Federal legislation and court
decision focused on securing
African Americans a full role in the
electoral process in all States.
o Civil Rights Act of 1965; racial
equality became a reality in voting.
o 23d Amendment added voters of
the District of Columbia.
Extending Suffrage: The Five Stages:
o The 24th Amendment
eliminated the poll tax and any
other tax as a condition for
voting in any federal election.
o A poll tax was a tax imposed by
several states as a qualification
for voting.
Extending Suffrage: The Five Stages:
o (5) The Fifth and latest expansion of the electorate came with the adoption of the 26th Amendment in 1971.
o It provides that no state can set a minimum age for voting at more than 18 years of age.
Power to set voting qualifications:
o Constitution does not give the
Federal Government the power to
set suffrage qualifications.
o Rather, that matter is reserved to
the States.
o The Constitution does however
place five restrictions on the ability
of the States to exercise the power.
Power to set voting qualifications:
o (1) Any person whom a state allows to vote for members of the most numerous branch of its own legislature must also be allowed to vote for representatives and senators in Congress.
o Today, with minor exceptions, each of the States allows the same voters to vote in all elections within the state.
Power to set voting qualifications:
o (2) No state can deprive any person of the right to vote “on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude (15th Amendment).
o (3) No state can deprive any person of the right to vote on account of sex (19th Amendment)
Power to set voting qualifications:
o (4) No State can require payment of any tax as a condition for taking part in the nomination or election of any federal officeholder.
o That is no states can levy any tax in connection with the selection of the President, Vice President, or members of Congress (24th Amendment).
o (5) No state can deprive any person who is at least 18 years of age of the right to vote because of age (26th Amendment).
• What type of issues do you think would
influence young people to vote? (List Three
and explain why).
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