deprived of the rights of citizenship, as the right to vote
Still, for nearly another century, African Americans were systematically barred from voting, and they remained the largest group of disenfranchised citizens, or citizens denied the right to vote, in the nation’s population.
divide voting districts unfairly and to one's advantage
Gerrymandering is the practice of drawing electoral district lines (the boundaries of the geographic area from which a candidate is elected to a public office) in order to limit the voting strength of a particular group or party.
State law directs local election officials to review the lists of registered voters and to remove the names of those who are no longer eligible to vote. This process, known as purging, is usually done every two or four years.
a document listing the alternatives that is used in voting
As a general rule, the farther down the ballot an office is, the fewer the number of votes that will be cast for it. This phenomenon is sometimes called ballot fatigue. The expression suggests that many voters exhaust their patience and/or their knowledge as they work their way down the ballot.
Another large group of nonvoters is composed of people who have no sense of political efficacy. That is, they lack any feeling of influence or effectiveness in politics. They do not believe that they or their votes can have any real impact on what government does or does not do.
a neutral or uncommitted person, especially in politics
Another telling sign is the large number of voters who now call themselves independents. That term is regularly used to identify those people who have no party affiliation.
Created on Fri May 28 13:16:15 EDT 2021
(updated Thu Jun 10 14:12:46 EDT 2021)
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