Search for crossword answers and clues
Right to vote in an election
Answer for the clue "Right to vote in an election ", 9 letters:
franchise
Alternative clues for the word franchise
Word definitions for franchise in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. an authorization to sell a company's goods or services in a particular place a business established or operated under an authorization to sell or distribute a company's goods or services in a particular area [syn: dealership ] a statutory right or privilege ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 14c., "to make free," from Old French franchiss- , past participle stem of franchir "to free" (12c.), from franc "free" (see frank (adj.)). Franchising is from 1570s; the commercial licensing sense is from 1966. Related: Franchisee ; franchiser ; franchisor ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. 1 A right or privilege officially granted to a person, a group of people, or a company by a government. 2 An acknowledgment of a corporation's existence and ownership. 3 The authorization granted by a company to sell or distribute its goods ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Franchise may refer to: Suffrage , the civil right to vote Jurisdictions used to be treated as property rights, and could be referred to as franchises. Franchising , a business method that involves licensing of trademarks and methods of doing business, ...
Usage examples of franchise.
Swazieland, the indemnity for the Jameson Raid, and arbitration, in exchange for the Franchise, otherwise, I should have nothing.
From first appearance to arraignment to preliminary hearing and on to trial and then appeal, the franchise client demands hundreds if not thousands of billable hours.
Mr Boffin put down his treatise on the nature of Franchises, which he was studying in order that he might lead an opposition against the Ministry next Session, and even Sir Timothy Beeswax, who had done his work with Sir Orlando, joined the throng.
Maintenant, autre question a laquelle tu dois repondre avec la meme franchise: que penses-tu du duc de Naurouse?
Now you are about to have a convention which among other things will probably define the elective franchise.
With the prejudices which inspired the South,--prejudices made still more intense by the victory of the Union,--it was altogether certain that the Southern Conventions would not extend the elective franchise or civil right of any kind to the colored men of any class.
Only a minority of Republicans were ready to demand suffrage for those who had been recently emancipated, and who, from the ignorance peculiar to servitude, were presumably unfit to be intrusted with the elective franchise.
National interposition, but to reach it more effectively perhaps by excluding the entire colored population from the basis of Congressional representation, until by the action of the Southern States themselves the elective franchise should be conceded to the colored population.
State within this Union shall prescribe or establish any property qualifications which may or shall in any way abridge the elective franchise.
But whenever in any State the elective franchise shall be denied to any portion of its male citizens not less than twenty-one years of age, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion or other crime, the basis of representation in such State shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of male citizens shall bear to the whole number of such male citizens not less than twenty-one years of age.
State among the citizens of the United States in the exercise of the elective franchise, or in the right to hold office in any State, on account of race, color, nativity, property, education, or religious creed.
Fifteenth Amendment, now proposed, did not attempt to declare affirmatively that the negro should be endowed with the elective franchise, but it did what was tantamount, in forbidding to the United States or to any State the power to deny or abridge the right to vote on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
While the National Government refrained from withholding the elective franchise from men who had fought to destroy the Union, there is no doubt that disabilities and exclusions were imposed upon large classes in certain States of the South.
The complaint of discontented people in the Southern States was that there had been too great an expansion of popular rights, too large an extension of the elective franchise.
The one safeguard against an evil so great was the restoration of self-government to the people who had rebelled, the broadening of the elective franchise, the abolition of caste and privilege.