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Voting: A Right or Privilege?

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Voting: A Right or Privilege? GOVT311 Lecture 3 Voting Depend upon it, Sir, it is dangerous to open so fruitful a source of controversy and altercation as would be ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Voting: A Right or Privilege?


1
Voting A Right or Privilege?
  • GOVT311 Lecture 3

2
Voting
  • Depend upon it, Sir, it is dangerous to open so
    fruitful a source of controversy and altercation
    as would be opened by attempting to alter the
    qualifications of voters there will be no end of
    itit tends to confound and destroy all
    distinctions, and prostrate all ranks to one
    common level. John Adams, 1776.
  • Every man having evidence of attachment to, and
    permanent common interest with, the society,
    ought to share in its rights and privileges.
    George Mason, 1787.
  • The ultimate end of all freedom is the enjoyment
    of a right of free suffrage. Maryland Gazette,
    1776.

3
Suffrage in Colonial Times
4
Suffrage in Colonial Times
  • Property seven states explicitly set a value or
    acreage requirement of real estate. The
    remainder required a minimum personal property
    requirement (in SC, the payment of taxes was
    sufficient).

5
Suffrage in Colonial Times
  • Property provides
  • Stake in society
  • Independence from others
  • A signal of competence

6
Suffrage in Colonial Times
  • Residency Many colonies instituted residency
    requirements. Some made citizenship of the
    colony or England a requirement.
  • People who were explicitly barred
  • Servants
  • Paupers
  • Women (some New England towns allowed widows)
  • Non-White (African-Americans and Indians)
  • Religion
  • MA must be member of Congregational Church
  • Catholics could not vote in 5 states
  • Jews could not vote in 4 states

7
Suffrage in Colonial Times
  • Cities and Towns differed from Colony (or State)
    qualifications
  • citizenship of a town was determined by having
    commercial affairs in the town (not a residence)
  • Usually did not have a real estate property
    requirement
  • In Virginia, this meant people with property in
    more than one town could legally vote twice

8
Suffrage in Colonial Times
  • Trends leading up to the Revolutionary War
  • Some states broadened suffrage, relaxing
    religious tests and property requirements
  • Other states instituted more strict property
    requirements and excluded particular classes of
    people (religion and race).
  • Depending on the locality, 80-90 of white males
    were eligible (New England, South, and Frontier),
    40-50 in mid-Atlantic colonies

9
Suffrage in the U.S. Constitution
  • Does we the people mean universal suffrage (a
    right)?
  • Would opening the franchise (a privilege) for a
    particular group, such as all white males, lead
    to universal suffrage?

10
Suffrage in the U.S. Constitution
  • Pro-Property Requirement
  • Adams believed granting those without property
    the right to vote would lead to revolution open
    class warfare.
  • Jefferson agreed that those without property were
    not independent, but saw the cure as giving
    property to everyone.
  • Madison envisioned a future country where
    property-less would outnumber those with
    property. Either they would vote to take
    property, or would be corrupted by those with
    property.

11
Suffrage in the U.S. Constitution
  • Anti-Property Requirement
  • Benjamin Franklin believed that voting was a
    natural right. Today a man owns a jackass worth
    fifty dollars and he is entitled to vote but
    before the next election the jackass diesNow
    gentlemen, pray inform me, in whom is the right
    of suffrage? In the man or in the jackass?
  • Thomas Paine changed his mind, and favored
    universal suffrage after fighting alongside
    property-less men during the revolutionary war.

12
Suffrage in the U.S. Constitution
  • The worry
  • Once the franchise was expanded, there would be
    no end to it according to Adams.

13
Suffrage in the U.S. Constitution
  • Alternative A taxpaying requirement
  • Taxpayers have a stake in government
  • Taxpayers have a right to protect themselves
    against unfair government policies, i.e., no
    taxation without representation.
  • Consent of the governed if those who pay taxes
    cannot vote, they are encouraged to evade taxes.

14
Suffrage in the U.S. Constitution
  • Alternative Militia men
  • Like taxpayers, have a stake in their government
  • The franchise would belong to every man who pays
    his shot and bears his lot.
  • A powerful argument that resonates today. Has
    been a primary way in which the franchise has
    been expanded through American history.
  • Some states allowed militia men to vote in the
    convening of their (state) constitutional
    conventions. In Maryland, a rebellion ensued
    when militia men were not allowed to vote.

15
Suffrage in the U.S. Constitution
  • Our Founding Fathers could not agree and punted
    National voting requirements to the states
  • Article I, Section 2
  • The Electors (for the House of Representatives)
    in each state shall have the Qualifications
    requisite for Electors of the most numerous
    branch of the State Legislature.
  • Article I, Section 4
  • Guarantee every State in this Union a Republican
    form of government

16
What the States Did
  • GA, NY, and NC reduced their property
    requirements
  • VT (only state without a government at the
    start of the revolutionary war) rescinded
    property and tax requirements
  • MA increased property requirements
  • All states dropped restrictions on Catholics and
    Jews (though in SC, a voter had to acknowledge
    there being a God.)
  • Localities retained their independence in setting
    their local requirements many reduced or did
    away with property requirements.

17
The 1842 Rhode Island Dorr War
18
Long Term
  • By allowing states to decide the franchise, the
    Founding Fathers set in motion a system that
    would have a troubling future, particularly for
    African-Americans.

19
Suffrage Time-Line
  • Original voters White, religious, male, property
    owners
  • Early 1800s property requirement to tax
    requirement
  • 1850s Restricted to citizens, registration
    requirements
  • 1870 15th Amendment, Blacks granted vote
  • By 1900 Black turnout levels in South are
    practically zero because of Jim Crow laws such
    as literacy tests, registration laws, secret
    ballot, etc.
  • 1920 19th Amendment, women suffrage
  • 1930s restrictions on paupers eased
  • 1964 24th Amendment, repeal of poll taxes
  • 1965 Voting Rights Act restores voting rights to
    Blacks
  • 1972 26th Amendment, persons age 18-20 granted
    vote
  • 2002 Help America Vote Act (the mechanics of
    voting)
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