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US Government October 28, 2015
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Daily Warm-up:10-28-15 “No Shirt, No Shoes, No Service” Where have you seen this restriction? Do you think it is fair to place that restriction on paying customers?
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Daily Objectives: Students will be able to… identify the universal requirements for voting in the U.S. explain the other requirements that States have used or still use as voting qualifications.
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Agenda: 1. Daily Warm-up 2. Daily Objective Review 3. Voting Rights Explained Video 4. Voters and Voter Behavior: Voter Qualifications PWPT 5. Chapter 6 Section 2 Assessment pg. 157 #1-6 Homework: 2 nd, 3 rd, 4 th, & 6 th Periods-Work on your project!
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Voting Rights Explained Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrDvOhQqWAQ
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Universal Requirements Every State requires that any person who wants to vote must meet the following 3 factors: Citizenship Residency Age
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Universal Requirements Citizenship Aliens—foreign born residents who have not become citizens— generally cannot vote. Nothing in the Constitution states that aliens cannot vote and any State could allow them to do so if they chose to. During different times, about 1/4 the States permitted aliens who applied for naturalization the right to vote. Today, only two States draw distinctions between native-born and naturalized citizens: Minnesota requires a person to have been a citizen for at least 3 months prior to voting; Pennsylvania requires at least 1 month of citizenship
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Universal Requirements Residence You must be a legal resident in the State in which you wish to vote. States adopted residence requirements for 2 reasons: to keep a political machine from importing (bribing) enough outsiders to affect the outcome of local elections to allow new voters at least some time to become familiar with the candidates and issues in an election Traditionally, residency was achieved after living in the State for a year, 60-90 days in the country, 30 days in the local precinct.
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Universal Requirements Residence Today, residency requirements aren’t as long; typically 30 days Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970 Dunn v. Blumstein 1972 States prohibit transients—people living in the State for only a short time, from gaining a legal residence there College students, members of the armed services, etc. cannot vote in a State where they have temporary residence Some States allow college students to vote if they claim the campus as their legal residence
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Universal Requirements Age The 26 th Amendment extends suffrage to citizens who are at least 18 years of age. Any State could set the age at less than 18 if it chose to do so Until 1970, the age requirement for voting was 21 Georgia allowed 18 year olds in 1943; Kentucky 1955; Alaska 1959 (voting age of 19); Hawaii (voting age of 20) 26 th Amendment is largely attributed to “Old enough to fight, old enough to vote” 1972-48% of 18-20 year olds voted; 2000-28% of 18-20 year olds voted
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Other Qualifications States have imposed a number of other qualifications over time: Literacy requirements Tax payment Registration (survived)
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Other Qualifications Registration 49 States (all but ND) require voters to register Registration—procedure of voter identification intended to prevent fraudulent voting Also helps identify voters’ party preference Purging—the process of removing names of those who are no longer eligible to vote. Happens every 2-4 years; often ignored Poll Books—the official list of qualified voters in each precinct—tend to become clogged with ineligible voters Some view registration as a bar to voting, especially by the poor and less educated
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Other Qualifications Registration The U.S. is the only democratic country where people have to decide whether or not they will register to vote Motor Voter Law 1993 directs each State to: Allow all eligible citizens to register to vote when they apply/renew a driver’s license Provide voter registration by mail Make registration forms available at the local offices of State employment, welfare, and other social service agencies Each State must mail a questionnaire to registered voters every 4 years to purge poll books By 2000, 8 million people had registered to vote by the Motor Voter Law
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Other Qualifications Literacy No State has a suffrage qualification based on literacy—a person’s ability to read/write In most cases it was used unfairly to prevent certain groups from voting Connecticut 1855; Massachusetts 1857—limit voting by Irish Catholic immigrants
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Other Qualifications Literacy Mississippi 1890; southern States followed—limit African American vote Grandfather clauses—changes to State Constitutions to assist white males in voting who could not pass the literacy tests Stated that any man, or his male descendants, who had voted in the State before the adoption of the 15 th Amendment could become a legal voter without passing literacy tests or paying taxes Guinn v. United States 1915
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Other Qualifications Literacy Other States outside the south also adopted literacy tests Wyoming 1889; California 1894; Washington 1896; New Hampshire 1902; Arizona 1913; New York 1921; Oregon 1924; Alaska 1949 Congress eliminated literacy as a qualification for suffrage in 1970 with the passage of the Voting Rights Act Amendments Oregon v. Mitchell 1970
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Other Qualifications Tax Payment Property ownership (payment of taxes on that property) was a suffrage qualification Several States also demanded the payment of a poll tax as a condition of voting Southern States adopted the poll tax after 1889 to discourage African American voting The 24 th Amendment, ratified in 1964, outlawed the poll tax as a condition of voting Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections 1966
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Other Qualifications Persons Denied the Vote None of the 50 States allows people in mental institutions, or others who have been found mentally incompetent the right to vote Several States prohibit anyone committing a serious crime from gaining or regaining the right to vote In some States, those who are dishonorably discharged from the military are not allowed to vote
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