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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. The 24th Amendment helped to further the efforts of expanding civil rights through greater access to voting. Historically, poll tax had been levied in order for people to cast votes in federal elections, a mandate Congress strived to eliminate in 1939 to remove the last bit of voter-related property taxation that still remained from colonial times. Eleven southern states incorporated the poll tax into its voting prerequisites after the Reconstruction; just five states held onto this Amendment at ratification. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLC24amend.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in federal elections, a mandate Congress strived to eliminate in 1939 to remove the last bit of voter-related property taxation that still remained from colonial times. Eleven southern states
incorporated the poll tax into its voting prerequisites after the Reconstruction; just five states held onto this Amendment at ratification. Congress saw this as a clear infringement of citizens
franchise, otherwise understood as civil rights, and sought to reverse it so there would be significantly more political involvement from the common man. Ratification brought considerable focus upon the
questionable nature of poll tax, encouraging the Supreme Court to ultimately void its validity as directly violating the equal protection clause. A Virginia statute was struck down in Harman v.
Forssenius effectively abolishing poll tax as a qualifying agent to vote, which provided voters in federal elections the opportunity to do one of two things: 1) file a certification of
residence six months prior to voting or 2) pay the tax. These seemingly viable option was quickly ruled a burdensome process for people who chose the first way, inasmuch
as it ran headlong into the right already granted those whose choice it was to exercise the inherent voting right bestowed by that very Amendment. As such, the Court
unanimously agreed people were not to be penalized for opting in favor of what was already theirs to take advantage of within the scope of Constitutional liberties (Meese, Forte &
Spalding, 2005). This was indeed a monumental turning point in the long-standing quest for equitable voters rights that became anything but stable during the Reconstruction, which reflects how much
of an influence the 24th Amendment had upon the forward progression of civil rights. The overall value of how the 24th Amendment furthered
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