Report Outline
Movement to Lower the Voting Age
The Voting Age and the Draft Age
Public Opinion on Extension of Franchise
Special Focus
Movement to Lower the Voting Age
In the 1944 national election, for the first time in the history of the Republic, men and women less than 21 years of age will be permitted to vote in one of the states of the American Union. Georgia reduced the voting age to 18 years in 1943 by constitutional amendment; in all other states citizens must have passed their 21st birthdays before becoming eligible to vote in federal, state or local elections. Georgia, one of the 13 original states, is usually classed as one of the most conservative of the 48 American commonwealths.
Because Georgia's electoral votes are assured to the candidate of the Democratic party, the lowering of the voting age for citizens of the state will have no effect upon the outcome of the 1944 presidential election. However, extension of the franchise to the 18–20 year age group by this state in the heart of the Solid South is only one of many evidences of a growing movement to grant voting rights to the generation which is now playing an important role in defense of democracy on the field of battle. Reduction of the voting age to 18 in all states would increase the electorate by about one-tenth and would change the political complexion of many areas if the new voters aligned themselves preponderantly with one or the other of the two major parties.
Voting-Age Proposals in Congress and Legislatures
Since the lowering of the draft age to 18 years in 1942, seven separate proposals to lower the voting age in all states to 18 years have been offered in Congress. Two resolutions to amend the federal Constitution to this end have been introduced in the Senate and five in the House. A sixth House resolution would lower the voting age to 19 instead of 18 years. These proposals are now pending before the Judiciary committees of the two houses. Approval by two-thirds votes in the Senate and House, and ratification by three-fourths of the states, would be required to make any one of them a part of the federal Constitution. |
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Aug. 19, 2005 |
Draft Debates |
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Jan. 11, 1991 |
Should the U.S. Reinstate the Draft? |
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Jun. 13, 1980 |
Draft Registration |
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Jun. 20, 1975 |
Volunteer Army |
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Nov. 17, 1971 |
Rebuilding the Army |
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Nov. 18, 1970 |
Expatriate Americans |
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Mar. 20, 1968 |
Resistance to Military Service |
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Jun. 22, 1966 |
Draft Law Revision |
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Jan. 20, 1965 |
Reserve Forces and the Draft |
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Feb. 14, 1962 |
Military Manpower Policies |
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Jun. 03, 1954 |
Military Manpower |
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Sep. 24, 1952 |
National Health and Manpower Resources |
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Oct. 24, 1950 |
Training for War Service |
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Aug. 21, 1950 |
Manpower Controls |
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Aug. 13, 1945 |
Peacetime Conscription |
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Sep. 09, 1944 |
The Voting Age |
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Apr. 15, 1944 |
Universal Military Service |
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Feb. 17, 1942 |
Compulsory Labor Service |
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Jun. 11, 1941 |
Revision of the Draft System |
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Aug. 14, 1940 |
Conscription in the United States |
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Apr. 24, 1939 |
Conscription for Military Service |
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