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Twenty-sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution

The Twenty-sixth Amendment (Amendment XXVI) to the United States Constitution established a nationally standardized minimum age of 18 for participation in state and local elections. It was proposed by Congress on March 23, 1971, and three-fourths of the states ratified it by July 1, 1971.

Various public officials had supported lowering the voting age during the mid-20th century, but were unable to gain the legislative momentum necessary for passing a constitutional amendment.

The drive to lower the voting age from 21 to 18 grew across the country during the 1960s and was driven in part by the military draft held during the Vietnam War. The draft conscripted young men between the ages of 18 and 21 into the United States Armed Forces, primarily the U.S. Army, to serve in or support military combat operations in Vietnam.[1] This means young men could be required to fight and possibly die for their nation in wartime at 18. However, these same citizens could not have a legal say in the government's decision to wage that war until the age of 21. A youth rights movement emerged in response, calling for a similarly reduced voting age. A common slogan of proponents of lowering the voting age was "old enough to fight, old enough to vote".[2]

Determined to get around inaction on the issue, congressional allies included a provision for the 18-year-old vote in a 1970 bill that extended the Voting Rights Act. The Supreme Court subsequently held in the case of Oregon v. Mitchell that Congress could not lower the voting age for state and local elections. Recognizing the confusion and costs that would be involved in maintaining separate voting rolls and elections for federal and state contests, Congress quickly proposed and the states ratified the Twenty-sixth Amendment.

Section 1. The right of citizens of the United States, who are eighteen years of age or older, to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of age.

Section 2. The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.[3]

Background edit

The framers of the U.S. Constitution did not establish specific criteria for national citizenship or voting qualifications in state or federal elections. Before the Twenty-sixth Amendment, states had the authority to set their own minimum voting ages, which was typically twenty-one as the national standard.[4]

Senator Harley Kilgore began advocating for a lowered voting age in 1941 in the 77th Congress.[5] Despite the support of fellow senators, representatives, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, Congress failed to pass any national change. However, public interest in lowering the voting age became a topic of interest at the local level. In 1943 and 1955 respectively, the Georgia and Kentucky legislatures approved measures to lower the voting age to 18.[6]

President Dwight D. Eisenhower, in his 1954 State of the Union address, became the first president to publicly support prohibiting age-based denials of suffrage for those 18 and older.[7] During the 1960s, both Congress and the state legislatures came under increasing pressure to lower the minimum voting age from 21 to 18. This was in large part due to the Vietnam War, in which many young men who were ineligible to vote were conscripted to fight in the war, thus lacking any means to influence the people sending them off to risk their lives. "Old enough to fight, old enough to vote" was a common slogan used by proponents of lowering the voting age. The slogan traced its roots to World War II, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt lowered the military draft age to 18.

In 1963, the President's Commission on Registration and Voting Participation, in its report to President Johnson, encouraged lowering the voting age. Johnson proposed an immediate national grant of the right to vote to 18-year-olds on May 29, 1968.[8] Historian Thomas H. Neale argues that the move to lower the voting age followed a historical pattern similar to other extensions of the franchise; with the escalation of the war in Vietnam, constituents were mobilized and eventually a constitutional amendment passed.[9]

Those advocating for a lower voting age drew on a range of arguments to promote their cause, and scholarship increasingly links the rise of support for a lower voting age to young people's role in the civil rights movement and other movements for social and political change of the 1950s and 1960s.[10][11] Increasing high-school graduation rates and young people's access to political information through new technologies also influenced more positive views of their preparation for the most important right of citizenship.[10]

Between 1942, when public debates about a lower voting age began in earnest, and the early 1970s, ideas about youth agency increasingly challenged the caretaking model that had previously dominated the nation's approaches to young people's rights.[10] Characteristics traditionally associated with youth—idealism, lack of "vested interests", and openness to new ideas—came to be seen as positive qualities for a political system that seemed to be in crisis.[10]

In 1970, Senator Ted Kennedy proposed amending the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to lower the voting age nationally.[12] On June 22, 1970, President Richard Nixon signed an extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that required the voting age to be 18 in all federal, state, and local elections.[13] In his statement on signing the extension, Nixon said:

Despite my misgivings about the constitutionality of this one provision, I have signed the bill. I have directed the Attorney General to cooperate fully in expediting a swift court test of the constitutionality of the 18-year-old provision.[14]

Subsequently, Oregon and Texas challenged the law in court, and the case came before the Supreme Court in 1970 as Oregon v. Mitchell.[15] By this time, four states had a minimum voting age below 21: Georgia, Kentucky, Alaska and Hawaii.[16][17]

Oregon v. Mitchell edit

During debate of the 1970 extension of the Voting Rights Act, Senator Ted Kennedy argued that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment allowed Congress to pass national legislation lowering the voting age.[18] In Katzenbach v. Morgan (1966), the Supreme Court had ruled that if Congress acted to enforce the 14th Amendment by passing a law declaring that a type of state law discriminates against a certain class of persons, the Supreme Court would let the law stand if the justices could "perceive a basis" for Congress's actions.[19]

President Nixon disagreed with Kennedy in a letter to the Speaker of the House and the House minority and majority leaders, asserting that the issue was not whether the voting age should be lowered, but how. In his own interpretation of Katzenbach, Nixon argued that to include age as a possible parameter of discrimination would overstretch the concept, and voiced concerns that the damage of a Supreme Court decision to overturn the Voting Rights Act could be disastrous.[20]

In Oregon v. Mitchell (1970), the Supreme Court considered whether the voting-age provisions Congress added to the Voting Rights Act in 1970 were constitutional. The Court struck down the provisions that established 18 as the voting age in state and local elections. However, the Court upheld the provision establishing the voting age as 18 in federal elections. The Court was deeply divided in this case, and a majority of justices did not agree on a rationale for the holding.[21][22]

The decision resulted in states being able to maintain 21 as the voting age in state and local elections, but being required to establish separate voter rolls so that voters between 18 and 21 years old could vote in federal elections.[23]

Opposition edit

Although the Twenty-sixth Amendment passed faster than any other constitutional amendment, about 17 states refused to pass measures to lower their minimum voting ages after Nixon signed the 1970 extension to the Voting Rights Act.[5] Opponents to extending the vote to youths questioned the maturity and responsibility of people at the age of 18. Representative Emanuel Celler, one of the most vocal opponents of a lower voting age from the 1940s through 1970 (and Chair of the powerful House Judiciary Committee for much of that period), insisted that youth lacked "the good judgment" essential to good citizenship and that the qualities that made youth good soldiers did not also make them good voters.[10] Professor William G. Carleton wondered why the vote was proposed for youth at a time when the period of adolescence had grown so substantially rather than in the past when people had more responsibilities at earlier ages.[24] Carleton further criticized the move to lower the voting age, citing American preoccupations with youth in general, exaggerated reliance on higher education, and equating technological savvy with responsibility and intelligence.[25] He denounced the military service argument as well, calling it a "cliche".[26] Considering the ages of soldiers in the Civil War, he asserted that literacy and education were not the grounds for limiting voting; rather, common sense and the capacity to understand the political system grounded voting-age restrictions.[27]

James J. Kilpatrick, a political columnist, asserted that the states were "extorted" into ratifying the Twenty-sixth Amendment.[28] In his article, he claims that by passing the 1970 extension to the Voting Rights Act, Congress effectively forced the States to ratify the amendment lest they be forced to financially and bureaucratically cope with maintaining two voting registers. George Gallup also mentions the cost of registration in his article showing percentages favoring or opposing the amendment, and he draws particular attention to the lower rates of support among adults aged 30–49 and over 50 (57% and 52% respectively) as opposed to those aged 18–20 and 21–29 (84% and 73% respectively).[29]

Proposal and ratification edit

 
The Twenty-sixth Amendment in the National Archives

Passage by Congress edit

Senator Birch Bayh's subcommittee on constitutional amendments began hearings on extending voting rights to 18-year-olds in 1968.[30]

After Oregon v. Mitchell, Bayh surveyed election officials in 47 states and found that registering an estimated 10 million young people in a separate system for federal elections would cost approximately $20 million.[31] Bayh concluded that most states could not change their state constitutions in time for the 1972 election, mandating national action to avoid "chaos and confusion" at the polls.[32]

On March 2, 1971, Bayh's subcommittee and the House Judiciary Committee approved the proposed constitutional amendment to lower the voting age to 18 for all elections.[33]

On March 10, 1971, the Senate voted 94–0 in favor of proposing a constitutional amendment to guarantee the minimum voting age could not be higher than 18.[34][35] On March 23, 1971, the House of Representatives voted 401–19 in favor of the proposed amendment.[36][37]

1971 U.S. House
Twenty-sixth Amendment
 vote:[38]
Party Total votes
Democratic Republican
Yea 236 165 401  (92.6%)
Nay 7 12 19  (4.4%)
Not Voting 9 3 12 (2.8%)
Vacant 2
Result: Adopted
Vote By Members
Roll call votes on the 26th Amendment
Representative Seat Vote
Jack Edwards Yea
William Louis Dickinson Yea
George W. Andrews Yea
Bill Nichols Yea
Walter Flowers Yea
John Hall Buchanan Jr. Yea
Tom Bevill Yea
Robert E. Jones Jr. Yea
Nick Begich Yea
John Jacob Rhodes Yea
Mo Udall Yea
Sam Steiger Nay
William Vollie Alexander Jr. Yea
Wilbur Mills Yea
John Paul Hammerschmidt Yea
David Pryor Yea
Donald H. Clausen Yea
Harold T. Johnson Yea
John E. Moss Yea
Robert Leggett Yea
Phillip Burton Yea
William S. Mailliard Yea
Ron Dellums Yea
George P. Miller Yea
Don Edwards Yea
Charles Gubser Yea
Pete McCloskey Yea
Burt Talcott Yea
Charles M. Teague Yea
Jerome Waldie Yea
John J. McFall Yea
B.F. Sisk Yea
Glenn M. Anderson Yea
Bob Mathias Yea
Chester E. Holifield Yea
H. Allen Smith Yea
Augustus Hawkins Yea
James C. Corman Yea
Del M. Clawson Nay
John H. Rousselot Nay
Charles E. Wiggins Nay
Thomas M. Rees Yea
Barry Goldwater, Jr. Nay
Alphonzo E. Bell Jr. Yea
Edward R. Roybal Yea
Charles H. Wilson Yea
Craig Hosmer Yea
Jerry Pettis Yea
Richard T. Hanna Not voting
John G. Schmitz Nay
Bob Wilson Yea
Lionel Van Deerlin Yea
Victor Veysey Yea
Mike McKevitt Yea
Donald G. Brotzman Yea
Frank Evans Yea
Wayne N. Aspinall Yea
William R. Cotter Yea
Robert H. Steele Yea
Robert Giaimo Yea
Stewart McKinney Yea
John S. Monagan Yea
Ella Grasso Yea
Pete du Pont Yea
Bob Sikes Yea
Don Fuqua Yea
Charles E. Bennett Yea
Bill Chappell Yea
Louis Frey, Jr. Yea
Sam Gibbons Yea
James A. Haley Yea
Bill Young Yea
Paul Rogers Yea
J. Herbert Burke Yea
Claude Pepper Yea
Dante Fascell Yea
George Elliot Hagan Yea
Dawson Mathis Yea
Jack Brinkley Yea
Benjamin B. Blackburn Yea
Fletcher Thompson Yea
John Flynt Yea
John W. Davis Yea
W. S. Stuckey, Jr. Yea
Phillip M. Landrum Yea
Robert Grier Stephens, Jr. Yea
Spark Matsunaga Yea
Patsy Mink Not voting
James A. McClure Yea
Orval H. Hansen Yea
Ralph Metcalfe Yea
Abner J. Mikva Yea
Morgan F. Murphy Yea
Ed Derwinski Yea
John C. Kluczynski Yea
George W. Collins Yea
Frank Annunzio Yea
Dan Rostenkowski Yea
Sidney R. Yates Yea
Harold R. Collier Yea
Roman Pucinski Yea
Robert McClory Yea
Phil Crane Yea
John N. Erlenborn Yea
Charlotte Thompson Yea
John B. Anderson Yea
Leslie C. Arends Yea
Robert H. Michel Nay
Tom Railsback Yea
Paul Findley Yea
Kenneth J. Gray Yea
William L. Springer Yea
George E. Shipley Yea
Melvin Price Yea
Ray Madden Yea
Earl Landgrebe Not voting
John Brademas Yea
J. Edward Roush Yea
Elwood Hillis Yea
William G. Bray Yea
John T. Myers Yea
Roger H. Zion Yea
Lee H. Hamilton Yea
David W. Dennis Yea
Andrew Jacobs, Jr. Yea
Fred Schwengel Yea
John Culver Yea
H. R. Gross Nay
John Henry Kyl Yea
Neal Edward Smith Yea
Wiley Mayne Nay
William J. Scherle Yea
Keith Sebelius Yea
William R. Roy Yea
Larry Winn Yea
Garner E. Shriver Yea
Joe Skubitz Yea
Frank Stubblefield Yea
William Natcher Yea
Romano Mazzoli Yea
Gene Snyder Yea
Tim Lee Carter Yea
John C. Watts Yea
Carl D. Perkins Yea
F. Edward Hébert Nay
Hale Boggs Yea
Patrick T. Caffery Yea
Joe Waggoner Yea
Otto Passman Yea
John Rarick Nay
Edwin Edwards Not voting
Speedy Long Yea
Peter Kyros Yea
William Hathaway Yea
Vacant
Clarence Long Yea
Edward Garmatz Yea
Paul Sarbanes Yea
Lawrence Hogan Yea
Goodloe Byron Yea
Parren Mitchell Yea
Gilbert Gude Yea
Silvio O. Conte Yea
Edward Boland Yea
Robert Drinan Yea
Harold Donohue Yea
F. Bradford Morse Yea
Michael J. Harrington Yea
Torbert Macdonald Yea
Tip O'Neill Yea
Louise Day Hicks Yea
Margaret Heckler Yea
James A. Burke Yea
Hastings Keith Yea
John Conyers Yea
Marvin L. Esch Yea
Garry E. Brown Yea
J. Edward Hutchinson Nay
Gerald Ford Yea
Charles E. Chamberlain Yea
Donald Riegle Yea
R. James Harvey Yea
Guy Vander Jagt Yea
Elford Albin Cederberg Yea
Philip Ruppe Yea
James G. O'Hara Yea
Charles Diggs Yea
Lucien Nedzi Yea
William D. Ford Yea
John Dingell Yea
Martha Griffiths Yea
William Broomfield Yea
Jack H. McDonald Yea
Al Quie Yea
Ancher Nelsen Yea
Bill Frenzel Yea
Joseph Karth Yea
Donald M. Fraser Yea
John M. Zwach Yea
Robert Bergland Yea
John Blatnik Yea
Thomas Abernethy Yea
Jamie Whitten Yea
Charles H. Griffin Yea
Sonny Montgomery Yea
William M. Colmer Yea
William Clay, Sr. Not voting
James W. Symington Yea
Leonor Sullivan Yea
William J. Randall Yea
Richard Walker Bolling Yea
William Raleigh Hull, Jr. Yea
Durward Gorham Hall Nay
Richard Howard Ichord, Jr. Yea
William L. Hungate Yea
Bill Burlison Yea
Richard G. Shoup Yea
John Melcher Yea
Charles Thone Yea
John Y. McCollister Yea
David Martin Yea
Walter S. Baring, Jr. Yea
Louis C. Wyman Yea
James Colgate Cleveland Yea
John E. Hunt Yea
Charles W. Sandman, Jr. Yea
James J. Howard Yea
Frank Thompson Yea
Peter Frelinghuysen, Jr. Yea
Edwin B. Forsythe Yea
William B. Widnall Yea
Robert A. Roe Yea
Henry Helstoski Yea
Peter W. Rodino Yea
Joseph Minish Yea
Florence P. Dwyer Yea
Cornelius Gallagher Yea
Dominick V. Daniels Yea
Edward J. Patten Yea
Manuel Lujan, Jr. Yea
Harold L. Runnels Yea
Otis G. Pike Yea
James R. Grover, Jr. Yea
Lester L. Wolff Yea
John W. Wydler Yea
Norman F. Lent Yea
Seymour Halpern Yea
Joseph P. Addabbo Yea
Benjamin Stanley Rosenthal Yea
James J. Delaney Yea
Emanuel Celler Yea
Frank J. Brasco Yea
Shirley Chisholm Yea
Bertram L. Podell Yea
John J. Rooney Not voting
Hugh Carey Yea
John M. Murphy Yea
Ed Koch Yea
Charles Rangel Yea
Bella Abzug Yea
William Fitts Ryan Yea
James H. Scheuer Yea
Herman Badillo Yea
Jonathan Brewster Bingham Yea
Mario Biaggi Yea
Peter A. Peyser Yea
Ogden Reid Yea
John G. Dow Yea
Hamilton Fish IV Yea
Samuel S. Stratton Yea
Carleton J. King Yea
Robert C. McEwen Yea
Alexander Pirnie Yea
Howard W. Robison Yea
John H. Terry Yea
James M. Hanley Yea
Frank Horton Yea
Barber Conable Yea
James F. Hastings Yea
Jack Kemp Yea
Henry P. Smith III Yea
Thaddeus J. Dulski Yea
Walter B. Jones, Sr. Yea
Lawrence H. Fountain Yea
David N. Henderson Yea
Nick Galifianakis Yea
Wilmer Mizell Yea
L. Richardson Preyer Yea
Alton Lennon Yea
Earl B. Ruth Yea
Charles R. Jonas Yea
Jim Broyhill Yea
Roy A. Taylor Yea
Mark Andrews Yea
Arthur A. Link Yea
William J. Keating Yea
Donald D. Clancy Yea
Charles W. Whalen, Jr. Yea
William Moore McCulloch Not voting
Del Latta Yea
Bill Harsha Yea
Bud Brown Yea
Jackson Edward Betts Yea
Thomas L. Ashley Yea
Clarence E. Miller Yea
J. William Stanton Yea
Samuel L. Devine Yea
Charles Adams Mosher Yea
John F. Seiberling Yea
Chalmers Wylie Yea
Frank T. Bow Yea
John M. Ashbrook Yea
Wayne Hays Yea
Charles J. Carney Yea
James V. Stanton Yea
Louis Stokes Yea
Charles Vanik Yea
William Edwin Minshall, Jr. Yea
Walter E. Powell Yea
Page Belcher Yea
Ed Edmondson Yea
Carl Albert Yea
Tom Steed Yea
John Jarman Yea
John Newbold Camp Yea
Wendell Wyatt Nay
Al Ullman Yea
Edith Green Nay
John R. Dellenback Yea
William A. Barrett Yea
Robert N. C. Nix, Sr. Yea
James A. Byrne Yea
Joshua Eilberg Yea
William J. Green III Not voting
Gus Yatron Yea
Lawrence G. Williams Yea
Edward G. Biester, Jr. Yea
John H. Ware III Yea
Joseph M. McDade Yea
Daniel Flood Yea
J. Irving Whalley Yea
Lawrence Coughlin Yea
William S. Moorhead Yea
Fred B. Rooney Yea
Edwin D. Eshleman Yea
Herman T. Schneebeli Yea
Robert J. Corbett Not voting
George A. Goodling Yea
Joseph M. Gaydos Yea
John Herman Dent Not voting
John P. Saylor Yea
Albert W. Johnson Yea
Joseph P. Vigorito Yea
Frank M. Clark Yea
Thomas E. Morgan Yea
James G. Fulton Yea
Fernand St. Germain Yea
Robert Tiernan Yea
Vacant
Floyd Spence Yea
William Jennings Bryan Dorn Yea
fJames Mann Yea
Thomas S. Gettys Nay
John L. McMillan Yea
Frank E. Denholm Yea
James Abourezk Yea
Jimmy Quillen Yea
John Duncan, Sr. Yea
LaMar Baker Yea
Joe L. Evins Yea
Richard Fulton Yea
William Anderson (naval officer) Yea
Ray Blanton Yea
Ed Jones (Tennessee politician) Yea
Dan Kuykendall Yea
Wright Patman Yea
John Dowdy Not voting
James M. Collins Yea
Ray Roberts Not voting
Earle Cabell Yea
Olin E. Teague Yea
Bill Archer Yea
Robert C. Eckhardt Yea
Jack Bascom Brooks Yea
J. J. Pickle Yea
William R. Poage Nay
Jim Wright Yea
Graham B. Purcell, Jr. Yea
John Andrew Young Yea
Kika de la Garza Yea
Richard Crawford White Yea
Omar Burleson Nay
Robert Dale Price Yea
George H. Mahon Yea
Henry B. González Yea
O. C. Fisher Nay
Robert R. Casey Yea
Abraham Kazen Yea
K. Gunn McKay Yea
Sherman P. Lloyd Yea
Robert T. Stafford Yea
Thomas Pelly Yea
Lloyd Meeds Yea
Julia Butler Hansen Yea
Mike McCormack Yea
Tom Foley Yea
Floyd Hicks Yea
Brock Adams Yea
Bob Mollohan Yea
Harley Orrin Staggers Yea
John M. Slack, Jr. Yea
Ken Hechler Yea
James Kee Yea
Les Aspin Yea
Robert Kastenmeier Yea
Vernon Wallace Thomson Yea
Clement J. Zablocki Yea
Henry S. Reuss Yea
William A. Steiger Yea
Dave Obey Yea
John W. Byrnes Yea
Glenn Robert Davis Yea
Alvin O'Konski Yea
Teno Roncalio Yea

Ratification by the states edit

Having been passed by the 92nd United States Congress, the proposed Twenty-sixth Amendment was sent to the state legislatures for their consideration. Which state was the first to officially ratify the amendment was a matter of dispute: the Minnesota legislature approved the amendment at 3:14 p.m. CST (4:14 p.m. EST), minutes before U.S. Senate president pro tempore Allen J. Ellender officially approved the federal law at approximately 4:35[39] or 4:40 p.m. EST.[40] Legislators in Delaware, which ratified the amendment at 4:51 p.m., argued that Minnesota's ratification was invalid because the amendment had not yet been sent to the states.[39][41] The U.S. Senate parliamentarian ruled that Minnesota acted prematurely, but the legality of its ratification of the amendment was never officially challenged.[39]

Ratification was completed on June 30, 1971, after the amendment had been ratified by thirty-eight states. Which state was the 38th to ratify and thus put the amendment into effect has also been disputed. Contemporaneous reports agree that Ohio's House of Representatives cast the decisive vote on the evening of June 30, and that Alabama and North Carolina had ratified the amendment earlier in the day.[42][43] As of 2013, however, the Government Printing Office states that North Carolina did not complete its ratification of the amendment until July 1, at which time it became the 38th state to ratify.[44] Additionally, Alabama governor George Wallace claimed that his state was the 38th to ratify, because he did not sign the ratification resolution until after North Carolina and Ohio completed their ratifications; however, the approval of the governor is not required to ratify an amendment.[45]

  1. Minnesota: March 23, 1971 (4:14 p.m. EST)[40]
  2. Delaware: March 23, 1971 (4:51 p.m. EST)[39]
  3. Tennessee: March 23, 1971 (5:10 p.m. EST)[46]
  4. Washington: March 23, 1971 (5:42 p.m. EST)[46]
  5. Connecticut: March 23, 1971 (5:53 p.m. EST)[46]
  6. Hawaii: March 24, 1971
  7. Massachusetts: March 24, 1971
  8. Montana: March 29, 1971
  9. Arkansas: March 30, 1971
  10. Idaho: March 30, 1971
  11. Iowa: March 30, 1971
  12. Nebraska: April 2, 1971
  13. New Jersey: April 3, 1971
  14. Kansas: April 7, 1971
  15. Michigan: April 7, 1971
  16. Alaska: April 8, 1971
  17. Maryland: April 8, 1971
  18. Indiana: April 8, 1971
  19. Maine: April 9, 1971
  20. Vermont: April 16, 1971
  21. Louisiana: April 17, 1971
  22. California: April 19, 1971
  23. Colorado: April 27, 1971
  24. Pennsylvania: April 27, 1971
  25. Texas: April 27, 1971
  26. South Carolina: April 28, 1971
  27. West Virginia: April 28, 1971
  28. New Hampshire: May 13, 1971
  29. Arizona: May 14, 1971
  30. Rhode Island: May 27, 1971
  31. New York: June 2, 1971
  32. Oregon: June 4, 1971
  33. Missouri: June 14, 1971
  34. Wisconsin: June 22, 1971
  35. Illinois: June 29, 1971[44]
  36. Alabama: June 30, 1971
  37. North Carolina: June 30, 1971[43]
  38. Ohio: June 30, 1971[42]

Having been ratified by three-fourths of the States (38), the Twenty-sixth Amendment became part of the Constitution. On July 5, 1971, the Administrator of General Services, Robert Kunzig, certified its adoption. President Nixon and Julianne Jones, Joseph W. Loyd Jr., and Paul S. Larimer of the "Young Americans in Concert" also signed the certificate as witnesses. During the signing ceremony, held in the East Room of the White House, Nixon talked about his confidence in the youth of America:

As I meet with this group today, I sense that we can have confidence that America's new voters, America's young generation, will provide what America needs as we approach our 200th birthday, not just strength and not just wealth but the 'Spirit of '76' a spirit of moral courage, a spirit of high idealism in which we believe in the American dream, but in which we realize that the American dream can never be fulfilled until every American has an equal chance to fulfill it in their own life.[47]

The amendment was subsequently ratified by five more states, bringing the total number of ratifying states to forty-three:[44]

39. Oklahoma: July 1, 1971
40. Virginia: July 8, 1971
41. Wyoming: July 8, 1971
42. Georgia: October 4, 1971
43. South Dakota: March 4, 2014[48]

No action has been taken on the amendment by the states of Florida, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, or Utah.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The 26th Amendment". History. November 27, 2019. Retrieved July 30, 2020.
  2. ^ "The 26th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution". National Constitution Center – The 26th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  3. ^ United States Government Printing Office. "Reduction of Voting Age: Twenty-Sixth Amendment" (PDF).
  4. ^ Vaughn, Vanessa E. DOMESTIC AFFAIRS: Twenty-Sixth Amendment. Defining Documents: The 1970s. pp. 145–147.
  5. ^ a b Neale, Thomas H., "Lowering the Voting Age was not a New Idea", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), p. 35.
  6. ^ Neale, Thomas H., "Lowering the Voting Age was not a New Idea", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), pp. 36–37.
  7. ^ Dwight D. Eisenhower, Public Papers of the Presidents, January 7, 1954, p. 22.
  8. ^ University of California–Santa Barbara, The American Presidency Project, "Commencement Address at Texas Christian University".
  9. ^ Neale, Thomas H., "Lowering the Voting Age was not a New Idea", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), p. 38.
  10. ^ a b c d e de Schweinitz, Rebecca (May 22, 2015), "The Proper Age for Suffrage", Age in America, NYU Press, pp. 209–236, doi:10.18574/nyu/9781479870011.003.0011, ISBN 978-1-4798-7001-1
  11. ^ De Schweinitz, Rebecca (2009). If we could change the world: young people and America's long struggle for racial equality. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-3235-6. OCLC 963537002.
  12. ^ Kennedy, Edward M., "The Time Has Come to Let Young People Vote", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), pp. 56–64.
  13. ^ University of California, Santa Barbara. "Statement on Signing the Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970". presidency.ucsb.edu.
  14. ^ Richard Nixon, Public Papers of the Presidents, June 22, 1970, p. 512.
  15. ^ Educational Broadcasting Corporation (2006). "Majority Rules: Oregon v. Mitchell (1970)". PBS.
  16. ^ 18 for Georgia and Kentucky, 19 for Alaska and 20 for Hawaii
  17. ^ Neale, Thomas H. The Eighteen Year Old Vote: The Twenty-Sixth Amendment and Subsequent Voting Rates of Newly Enfranchised Age Groups. 1983.
  18. ^ "Oregon v. Mitchell". LII / Legal Information Institute. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  19. ^ Graham, Fred P., in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), p. 67.
  20. ^ Nixon, Richard, "Changing the Voting age will Require a Constitutional Amendment", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), pp. 70–77.
  21. ^ Tokaji, Daniel P. (2006). "Intent and Its Alternatives: Defending the New Voting Rights Act" (PDF). Alabama Law Review. 58: 353. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
  22. ^ Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U.S. 112 (1970), pp. 188–121
  23. ^ . Annenberg Learner. Archived from the original on June 8, 2019. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  24. ^ Carleton, William G., "Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), p. 47.
  25. ^ Carleton, William G., "Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), p. 48–49.
  26. ^ Carleton, William G., "Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), p. 49.
  27. ^ Carleton, William G., "Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), pp. 50–51.
  28. ^ Kilpatrick, James J., "The States are being Extorted into Ratifying the Twenty-sixth Amendment", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), pp. 123–127.
  29. ^ Gallup, George, "The Majority of Americans Favor the Twenty-sixth Amendment", in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age, ed. Engdahl, Sylvia (New York: Greenhaven Press, 2010), pp. 128–130.
  30. ^ Graham, Fred P. (May 15, 1968). "Voting Age of 18 Is Supported By Four Senators at a Hearing". The New York Times. p. 23.
  31. ^ Sperling, Godfrey Jr. (February 13, 1971). "Bayh peers into dual-voting thicket: Fraud possibilities weighed 'Intolerable burden'". The Christian Science Monitor.
  32. ^ MacKenzie, John P. (February 13, 1971). "Bayh Favors Amendment To End Vote-at-18 'Chaos'". The Washington Post. pp. A2.
  33. ^ "Amendment on Vote at 18 Gains a Step". The Chicago Tribune. United Press International. March 3, 1971. pp. C1.
  34. ^ Senate, Journal of the Senate, 92nd Congress, 1st session, 1971. S. S.J. Res. 7
  35. ^ "House Gets 18-Vote After Senate OKs It". The Evening Press (Binghamton, New York). Associated Press. March 11, 1971. p. 12.
  36. ^ House, Journal of the House, 92nd Congress, 1st session, 1971. H. S.J. Res. 7
  37. ^ Milutin Tomanović, ed. (1972). Hronika međunarodnih događaja 1971 [The Chronicle of International Events in 1971] (in Serbo-Croatian). Belgrade: Institute of International Politics and Economics. p. 2608.
  38. ^ "House of Representatives Vote On 26th Amendment". March 23, 1971. from the original on January 20, 2020.
  39. ^ a b c d Schamdeke, John, and Jack Nolan. "18-year-old vote passes House, is sent to states", Wilmington Morning News, March 24, 1971, pages 1 and 2.
  40. ^ a b "State Ratifies Vote Amendment", Minneapolis Tribune, March 24, 1971, page 14A.
  41. ^ "State Cries 'Foul' In Ratifying Race", Wilmington Evening Journal, March 24, 1971, pages 1 and 2.
  42. ^ a b Wheat, Warren. "18-Year-Old Vote In - Ohio Does It, Cincinnati Enquirer, July 1, 1971, front page.
  43. ^ a b "18-Year-Old Vote Now Law; N.C., Ohio Ratify Amendment", Charlotte Observer, July 1, 1971, pages 1A and 2A.
  44. ^ a b c "The Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and Interpretation, Centennial Edition, Interim Edition: Analysis of Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to June 26, 2013" (PDF). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. 2013. p. 44. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
  45. ^ "Wallace says Alabama was key to ballot", Bowling Green Sentinel-Tribune, July 2, 1971, front page.
  46. ^ a b c Morse, Charles F. J. "Legislature Ratifies 18-Year-Old Vote", Hartford Courant, March 24, 1971, pages 1 and 2.
  47. ^ "Remarks at a Ceremony Marking the Certification of the 26th Amendment to the Constitution". The American Presidency Project. University of California, Santa Barbara. Retrieved April 29, 2023.
  48. ^ "Senate Joint Resolution 1". South Dakota Legislature. Pierre, South Dakota: SD Legislative Research Council. from the original on April 29, 2023. Retrieved April 29, 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Caplan, Sheri J. Old Enough: How 18-Year-Olds Won the Vote & Why it Matters. Heath Hen, 2020. ISBN 978-1-7354-9300-8.

External links edit

  • CRS Annotated Constitution: Twenty-sixth Amendment
  • Eric Fish, The Twenty-sixth Amendment Enforcement Power

twenty, sixth, amendment, united, states, constitution, twenty, sixth, amendment, amendment, xxvi, united, states, constitution, established, nationally, standardized, minimum, participation, state, local, elections, proposed, congress, march, 1971, three, fou. The Twenty sixth Amendment Amendment XXVI to the United States Constitution established a nationally standardized minimum age of 18 for participation in state and local elections It was proposed by Congress on March 23 1971 and three fourths of the states ratified it by July 1 1971 Various public officials had supported lowering the voting age during the mid 20th century but were unable to gain the legislative momentum necessary for passing a constitutional amendment The drive to lower the voting age from 21 to 18 grew across the country during the 1960s and was driven in part by the military draft held during the Vietnam War The draft conscripted young men between the ages of 18 and 21 into the United States Armed Forces primarily the U S Army to serve in or support military combat operations in Vietnam 1 This means young men could be required to fight and possibly die for their nation in wartime at 18 However these same citizens could not have a legal say in the government s decision to wage that war until the age of 21 A youth rights movement emerged in response calling for a similarly reduced voting age A common slogan of proponents of lowering the voting age was old enough to fight old enough to vote 2 Determined to get around inaction on the issue congressional allies included a provision for the 18 year old vote in a 1970 bill that extended the Voting Rights Act The Supreme Court subsequently held in the case of Oregon v Mitchell that Congress could not lower the voting age for state and local elections Recognizing the confusion and costs that would be involved in maintaining separate voting rolls and elections for federal and state contests Congress quickly proposed and the states ratified the Twenty sixth Amendment Section 1 The right of citizens of the United States who are eighteen years of age or older to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of age Section 2 The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation 3 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Oregon v Mitchell 1 2 Opposition 2 Proposal and ratification 2 1 Passage by Congress 2 2 Ratification by the states 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Further reading 5 External linksBackground editSee also Conscription in the United States and Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War The framers of the U S Constitution did not establish specific criteria for national citizenship or voting qualifications in state or federal elections Before the Twenty sixth Amendment states had the authority to set their own minimum voting ages which was typically twenty one as the national standard 4 Senator Harley Kilgore began advocating for a lowered voting age in 1941 in the 77th Congress 5 Despite the support of fellow senators representatives and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt Congress failed to pass any national change However public interest in lowering the voting age became a topic of interest at the local level In 1943 and 1955 respectively the Georgia and Kentucky legislatures approved measures to lower the voting age to 18 6 President Dwight D Eisenhower in his 1954 State of the Union address became the first president to publicly support prohibiting age based denials of suffrage for those 18 and older 7 During the 1960s both Congress and the state legislatures came under increasing pressure to lower the minimum voting age from 21 to 18 This was in large part due to the Vietnam War in which many young men who were ineligible to vote were conscripted to fight in the war thus lacking any means to influence the people sending them off to risk their lives Old enough to fight old enough to vote was a common slogan used by proponents of lowering the voting age The slogan traced its roots to World War II when President Franklin D Roosevelt lowered the military draft age to 18 In 1963 the President s Commission on Registration and Voting Participation in its report to President Johnson encouraged lowering the voting age Johnson proposed an immediate national grant of the right to vote to 18 year olds on May 29 1968 8 Historian Thomas H Neale argues that the move to lower the voting age followed a historical pattern similar to other extensions of the franchise with the escalation of the war in Vietnam constituents were mobilized and eventually a constitutional amendment passed 9 Those advocating for a lower voting age drew on a range of arguments to promote their cause and scholarship increasingly links the rise of support for a lower voting age to young people s role in the civil rights movement and other movements for social and political change of the 1950s and 1960s 10 11 Increasing high school graduation rates and young people s access to political information through new technologies also influenced more positive views of their preparation for the most important right of citizenship 10 Between 1942 when public debates about a lower voting age began in earnest and the early 1970s ideas about youth agency increasingly challenged the caretaking model that had previously dominated the nation s approaches to young people s rights 10 Characteristics traditionally associated with youth idealism lack of vested interests and openness to new ideas came to be seen as positive qualities for a political system that seemed to be in crisis 10 In 1970 Senator Ted Kennedy proposed amending the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to lower the voting age nationally 12 On June 22 1970 President Richard Nixon signed an extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that required the voting age to be 18 in all federal state and local elections 13 In his statement on signing the extension Nixon said Despite my misgivings about the constitutionality of this one provision I have signed the bill I have directed the Attorney General to cooperate fully in expediting a swift court test of the constitutionality of the 18 year old provision 14 Subsequently Oregon and Texas challenged the law in court and the case came before the Supreme Court in 1970 as Oregon v Mitchell 15 By this time four states had a minimum voting age below 21 Georgia Kentucky Alaska and Hawaii 16 17 Oregon v Mitchell edit During debate of the 1970 extension of the Voting Rights Act Senator Ted Kennedy argued that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment allowed Congress to pass national legislation lowering the voting age 18 In Katzenbach v Morgan 1966 the Supreme Court had ruled that if Congress acted to enforce the 14th Amendment by passing a law declaring that a type of state law discriminates against a certain class of persons the Supreme Court would let the law stand if the justices could perceive a basis for Congress s actions 19 President Nixon disagreed with Kennedy in a letter to the Speaker of the House and the House minority and majority leaders asserting that the issue was not whether the voting age should be lowered but how In his own interpretation of Katzenbach Nixon argued that to include age as a possible parameter of discrimination would overstretch the concept and voiced concerns that the damage of a Supreme Court decision to overturn the Voting Rights Act could be disastrous 20 In Oregon v Mitchell 1970 the Supreme Court considered whether the voting age provisions Congress added to the Voting Rights Act in 1970 were constitutional The Court struck down the provisions that established 18 as the voting age in state and local elections However the Court upheld the provision establishing the voting age as 18 in federal elections The Court was deeply divided in this case and a majority of justices did not agree on a rationale for the holding 21 22 The decision resulted in states being able to maintain 21 as the voting age in state and local elections but being required to establish separate voter rolls so that voters between 18 and 21 years old could vote in federal elections 23 Opposition edit Although the Twenty sixth Amendment passed faster than any other constitutional amendment about 17 states refused to pass measures to lower their minimum voting ages after Nixon signed the 1970 extension to the Voting Rights Act 5 Opponents to extending the vote to youths questioned the maturity and responsibility of people at the age of 18 Representative Emanuel Celler one of the most vocal opponents of a lower voting age from the 1940s through 1970 and Chair of the powerful House Judiciary Committee for much of that period insisted that youth lacked the good judgment essential to good citizenship and that the qualities that made youth good soldiers did not also make them good voters 10 Professor William G Carleton wondered why the vote was proposed for youth at a time when the period of adolescence had grown so substantially rather than in the past when people had more responsibilities at earlier ages 24 Carleton further criticized the move to lower the voting age citing American preoccupations with youth in general exaggerated reliance on higher education and equating technological savvy with responsibility and intelligence 25 He denounced the military service argument as well calling it a cliche 26 Considering the ages of soldiers in the Civil War he asserted that literacy and education were not the grounds for limiting voting rather common sense and the capacity to understand the political system grounded voting age restrictions 27 James J Kilpatrick a political columnist asserted that the states were extorted into ratifying the Twenty sixth Amendment 28 In his article he claims that by passing the 1970 extension to the Voting Rights Act Congress effectively forced the States to ratify the amendment lest they be forced to financially and bureaucratically cope with maintaining two voting registers George Gallup also mentions the cost of registration in his article showing percentages favoring or opposing the amendment and he draws particular attention to the lower rates of support among adults aged 30 49 and over 50 57 and 52 respectively as opposed to those aged 18 20 and 21 29 84 and 73 respectively 29 Proposal and ratification edit nbsp The Twenty sixth Amendment in the National ArchivesPassage by Congress edit See also Presidency of Richard Nixon Constitutional amendments Senator Birch Bayh s subcommittee on constitutional amendments began hearings on extending voting rights to 18 year olds in 1968 30 After Oregon v Mitchell Bayh surveyed election officials in 47 states and found that registering an estimated 10 million young people in a separate system for federal elections would cost approximately 20 million 31 Bayh concluded that most states could not change their state constitutions in time for the 1972 election mandating national action to avoid chaos and confusion at the polls 32 On March 2 1971 Bayh s subcommittee and the House Judiciary Committee approved the proposed constitutional amendment to lower the voting age to 18 for all elections 33 On March 10 1971 the Senate voted 94 0 in favor of proposing a constitutional amendment to guarantee the minimum voting age could not be higher than 18 34 35 On March 23 1971 the House of Representatives voted 401 19 in favor of the proposed amendment 36 37 1971 U S HouseTwenty sixth Amendment vote 38 Party Total votesDemocratic RepublicanYea 236 165 401 92 6 Nay 7 12 19 4 4 Not Voting 9 3 12 2 8 Vacant 2Result AdoptedVote By MembersThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items December 2021 Roll call votes on the 26th AmendmentRepresentative Seat VoteJack Edwards AL 1 YeaWilliam Louis Dickinson AL 2 YeaGeorge W Andrews AL 3 YeaBill Nichols AL 4 YeaWalter Flowers AL 5 YeaJohn Hall Buchanan Jr AL 6 YeaTom Bevill AL 7 YeaRobert E Jones Jr AL 8 YeaNick Begich AK at large YeaJohn Jacob Rhodes AZ 1 YeaMo Udall AZ 2 YeaSam Steiger AZ 3 NayWilliam Vollie Alexander Jr AR 1 YeaWilbur Mills AR 2 YeaJohn Paul Hammerschmidt AR 3 YeaDavid Pryor AR 4 YeaDonald H Clausen CA 1 YeaHarold T Johnson CA 2 YeaJohn E Moss CA 3 YeaRobert Leggett CA 4 YeaPhillip Burton CA 5 YeaWilliam S Mailliard CA 6 YeaRon Dellums CA 7 YeaGeorge P Miller CA 8 YeaDon Edwards CA 9 YeaCharles Gubser CA 10 YeaPete McCloskey CA 11 YeaBurt Talcott CA 12 YeaCharles M Teague CA 13 YeaJerome Waldie CA 14 YeaJohn J McFall CA 15 YeaB F Sisk CA 16 YeaGlenn M Anderson CA 17 YeaBob Mathias CA 18 YeaChester E Holifield CA 19 YeaH Allen Smith CA 20 YeaAugustus Hawkins CA 21 YeaJames C Corman CA 22 YeaDel M Clawson CA 23 NayJohn H Rousselot CA 24 NayCharles E Wiggins CA 25 NayThomas M Rees CA 26 YeaBarry Goldwater Jr CA 27 NayAlphonzo E Bell Jr CA 28 YeaEdward R Roybal CA 30 YeaCharles H Wilson CA 31 YeaCraig Hosmer CA 32 YeaJerry Pettis CA 33 YeaRichard T Hanna CA 34 Not votingJohn G Schmitz CA 35 NayBob Wilson CA 36 YeaLionel Van Deerlin CA 37 YeaVictor Veysey CA 38 YeaMike McKevitt CO 1 YeaDonald G Brotzman CO 2 YeaFrank Evans CO 3 YeaWayne N Aspinall CO 4 YeaWilliam R Cotter CT 1 YeaRobert H Steele CT 2 YeaRobert Giaimo CT 3 YeaStewart McKinney CT 4 YeaJohn S Monagan CT 5 YeaElla Grasso CT 6 YeaPete du Pont DE at large YeaBob Sikes FL 1 YeaDon Fuqua FL 2 YeaCharles E Bennett FL 3 YeaBill Chappell FL 4 YeaLouis Frey Jr FL 5 YeaSam Gibbons FL 6 YeaJames A Haley FL 7 YeaBill Young FL 8 YeaPaul Rogers FL 9 YeaJ Herbert Burke FL 10 YeaClaude Pepper FL 11 YeaDante Fascell FL 12 YeaGeorge Elliot Hagan GA 1 YeaDawson Mathis GA 2 YeaJack Brinkley GA 3 YeaBenjamin B Blackburn GA 4 YeaFletcher Thompson GA 5 YeaJohn Flynt GA 6 YeaJohn W Davis GA 7 YeaW S Stuckey Jr GA 8 YeaPhillip M Landrum GA 9 YeaRobert Grier Stephens Jr GA 10 YeaSpark Matsunaga HI 1 YeaPatsy Mink HI 2 Not votingJames A McClure ID 1 YeaOrval H Hansen ID 2 YeaRalph Metcalfe IL 3 YeaAbner J Mikva IL 2 YeaMorgan F Murphy IL 1 YeaEd Derwinski IL 4 YeaJohn C Kluczynski IL 5 YeaGeorge W Collins IL 6 YeaFrank Annunzio IL 7 YeaDan Rostenkowski IL 8 YeaSidney R Yates IL 9 YeaHarold R Collier IL 10 YeaRoman Pucinski IL 11 YeaRobert McClory IL 12 YeaPhil Crane IL 13 YeaJohn N Erlenborn IL 14 YeaCharlotte Thompson IL 15 YeaJohn B Anderson IL 16 YeaLeslie C Arends IL 17 YeaRobert H Michel IL 18 NayTom Railsback IL 19 YeaPaul Findley IL 20 YeaKenneth J Gray IL 21 YeaWilliam L Springer IL 22 YeaGeorge E Shipley IL 23 YeaMelvin Price IL 24 YeaRay Madden IN 1 YeaEarl Landgrebe IN 2 Not votingJohn Brademas IN 3 YeaJ Edward Roush IN 4 YeaElwood Hillis IN 5 YeaWilliam G Bray IN 6 YeaJohn T Myers IN 7 YeaRoger H Zion IN 8 YeaLee H Hamilton IN 9 YeaDavid W Dennis IN 10 YeaAndrew Jacobs Jr IN 11 YeaFred Schwengel IA 1 YeaJohn Culver IA 2 YeaH R Gross IA 3 NayJohn Henry Kyl IA 4 YeaNeal Edward Smith IA 5 YeaWiley Mayne IA 6 NayWilliam J Scherle IA 7 YeaKeith Sebelius KS 1 YeaWilliam R Roy KS 2 YeaLarry Winn KS 3 YeaGarner E Shriver KS 4 YeaJoe Skubitz KS 5 YeaFrank Stubblefield KY 1 YeaWilliam Natcher KY 2 YeaRomano Mazzoli KY 3 YeaGene Snyder KY 4 YeaTim Lee Carter KY 5 YeaJohn C Watts KY 6 YeaCarl D Perkins KY 7 YeaF Edward Hebert LA 1 NayHale Boggs LA 2 YeaPatrick T Caffery LA 3 YeaJoe Waggoner LA 4 YeaOtto Passman LA 5 YeaJohn Rarick LA 6 NayEdwin Edwards LA 7 Not votingSpeedy Long LA 8 YeaPeter Kyros ME 1 YeaWilliam Hathaway ME 2 YeaVacant MD 1Clarence Long MD 2 YeaEdward Garmatz MD 3 YeaPaul Sarbanes MD 4 YeaLawrence Hogan MD 5 YeaGoodloe Byron MD 6 YeaParren Mitchell MD 7 YeaGilbert Gude MD 8 YeaSilvio O Conte MA 1 YeaEdward Boland MA 2 YeaRobert Drinan MA 3 YeaHarold Donohue MA 4 YeaF Bradford Morse MA 5 YeaMichael J Harrington MA 6 YeaTorbert Macdonald MA 7 YeaTip O Neill MA 8 YeaLouise Day Hicks MA 9 YeaMargaret Heckler MA 10 YeaJames A Burke MA 11 YeaHastings Keith MA 12 YeaJohn Conyers MI 1 YeaMarvin L Esch MI 2 YeaGarry E Brown MI 3 YeaJ Edward Hutchinson MI 4 NayGerald Ford MI 5 YeaCharles E Chamberlain MI 6 YeaDonald Riegle MI 7 YeaR James Harvey MI 8 YeaGuy Vander Jagt MI 9 YeaElford Albin Cederberg MI 10 YeaPhilip Ruppe MI 11 YeaJames G O Hara MI 12 YeaCharles Diggs MI 13 YeaLucien Nedzi MI 14 YeaWilliam D Ford MI 15 YeaJohn Dingell MI 16 YeaMartha Griffiths MI 17 YeaWilliam Broomfield MI 18 YeaJack H McDonald MI 19 YeaAl Quie MN 1 YeaAncher Nelsen MN 2 YeaBill Frenzel MN 3 YeaJoseph Karth MN 4 YeaDonald M Fraser MN 5 YeaJohn M Zwach MN 6 YeaRobert Bergland MN 7 YeaJohn Blatnik MN 8 YeaThomas Abernethy MS 1 YeaJamie Whitten MS 2 YeaCharles H Griffin MS 3 YeaSonny Montgomery MS 4 YeaWilliam M Colmer MS 5 YeaWilliam Clay Sr MO 1 Not votingJames W Symington MO 2 YeaLeonor Sullivan MO 3 YeaWilliam J Randall MO 4 YeaRichard Walker Bolling MO 5 YeaWilliam Raleigh Hull Jr MO 6 YeaDurward Gorham Hall MO 7 NayRichard Howard Ichord Jr MO 8 YeaWilliam L Hungate MO 9 YeaBill Burlison MO 10 YeaRichard G Shoup MT 1 YeaJohn Melcher MT 2 YeaCharles Thone NE 1 YeaJohn Y McCollister NE 2 YeaDavid Martin NE 3 YeaWalter S Baring Jr NV at large YeaLouis C Wyman NH 1 YeaJames Colgate Cleveland NH 2 YeaJohn E Hunt NJ 1 YeaCharles W Sandman Jr NJ 2 YeaJames J Howard NJ 3 YeaFrank Thompson NJ 4 YeaPeter Frelinghuysen Jr NJ 5 YeaEdwin B Forsythe NJ 6 YeaWilliam B Widnall NJ 7 YeaRobert A Roe NJ 8 YeaHenry Helstoski NJ 9 YeaPeter W Rodino NJ 10 YeaJoseph Minish NJ 11 YeaFlorence P Dwyer NJ 12 YeaCornelius Gallagher NJ 13 YeaDominick V Daniels NJ 14 YeaEdward J Patten NJ 15 YeaManuel Lujan Jr NM 1 YeaHarold L Runnels NM 2 YeaOtis G Pike NY 1 YeaJames R Grover Jr NY 2 YeaLester L Wolff NY 3 YeaJohn W Wydler NY 4 YeaNorman F Lent NY 5 YeaSeymour Halpern NY 6 YeaJoseph P Addabbo NY 7 YeaBenjamin Stanley Rosenthal NY 8 YeaJames J Delaney NY 9 YeaEmanuel Celler NY 10 YeaFrank J Brasco NY 11 YeaShirley Chisholm NY 12 YeaBertram L Podell NY 13 YeaJohn J Rooney NY 14 Not votingHugh Carey NY 15 YeaJohn M Murphy NY 16 YeaEd Koch NY 17 YeaCharles Rangel NY 18 YeaBella Abzug NY 19 YeaWilliam Fitts Ryan NY 20 YeaJames H Scheuer NY 21 YeaHerman Badillo NY 22 YeaJonathan Brewster Bingham NY 23 YeaMario Biaggi NY 24 YeaPeter A Peyser NY 25 YeaOgden Reid NY 26 YeaJohn G Dow NY 27 YeaHamilton Fish IV NY 28 YeaSamuel S Stratton NY 29 YeaCarleton J King NY 30 YeaRobert C McEwen NY 31 YeaAlexander Pirnie NY 32 YeaHoward W Robison NY 33 YeaJohn H Terry NY 34 YeaJames M Hanley NY 35 YeaFrank Horton NY 36 YeaBarber Conable NY 37 YeaJames F Hastings NY 38 YeaJack Kemp NY 39 YeaHenry P Smith III NY 40 YeaThaddeus J Dulski NY 41 YeaWalter B Jones Sr NC 1 YeaLawrence H Fountain NC 2 YeaDavid N Henderson NC 3 YeaNick Galifianakis NC 4 YeaWilmer Mizell NC 5 YeaL Richardson Preyer NC 6 YeaAlton Lennon NC 7 YeaEarl B Ruth NC 8 YeaCharles R Jonas NC 9 YeaJim Broyhill NC 10 YeaRoy A Taylor NC 11 YeaMark Andrews ND 1 YeaArthur A Link ND 2 YeaWilliam J Keating OH 1 YeaDonald D Clancy OH 2 YeaCharles W Whalen Jr OH 3 YeaWilliam Moore McCulloch OH 4 Not votingDel Latta OH 5 YeaBill Harsha OH 6 YeaBud Brown OH 7 YeaJackson Edward Betts OH 8 YeaThomas L Ashley OH 9 YeaClarence E Miller OH 10 YeaJ William Stanton OH 11 YeaSamuel L Devine OH 12 YeaCharles Adams Mosher OH 13 YeaJohn F Seiberling OH 14 YeaChalmers Wylie OH 15 YeaFrank T Bow OH 16 YeaJohn M Ashbrook OH 17 YeaWayne Hays OH 18 YeaCharles J Carney OH 19 YeaJames V Stanton OH 20 YeaLouis Stokes OH 21 YeaCharles Vanik OH 22 YeaWilliam Edwin Minshall Jr OH 23 YeaWalter E Powell OH 24 YeaPage Belcher OK 1 YeaEd Edmondson OK 2 YeaCarl Albert OK 3 YeaTom Steed OK 4 YeaJohn Jarman OK 5 YeaJohn Newbold Camp OK 6 YeaWendell Wyatt OR 1 NayAl Ullman OR 2 YeaEdith Green OR 3 NayJohn R Dellenback OR 4 YeaWilliam A Barrett PA 1 YeaRobert N C Nix Sr PA 2 YeaJames A Byrne PA 3 YeaJoshua Eilberg PA 4 YeaWilliam J Green III PA 5 Not votingGus Yatron PA 6 YeaLawrence G Williams PA 7 YeaEdward G Biester Jr PA 8 YeaJohn H Ware III PA 9 YeaJoseph M McDade PA 10 YeaDaniel Flood PA 11 YeaJ Irving Whalley PA 12 YeaLawrence Coughlin PA 13 YeaWilliam S Moorhead PA 14 YeaFred B Rooney PA 15 YeaEdwin D Eshleman PA 16 YeaHerman T Schneebeli PA 17 YeaRobert J Corbett PA 18 Not votingGeorge A Goodling PA 19 YeaJoseph M Gaydos PA 20 YeaJohn Herman Dent PA 21 Not votingJohn P Saylor PA 22 YeaAlbert W Johnson PA 23 YeaJoseph P Vigorito PA 24 YeaFrank M Clark PA 25 YeaThomas E Morgan PA 26 YeaJames G Fulton PA 27 YeaFernand St Germain RI 1 YeaRobert Tiernan RI 2 YeaVacant SC 1Floyd Spence SC 2 YeaWilliam Jennings Bryan Dorn SC 3 YeafJames Mann SC 4 YeaThomas S Gettys SC 5 NayJohn L McMillan SC 6 YeaFrank E Denholm SD 1 YeaJames Abourezk SD 2 YeaJimmy Quillen TN 1 YeaJohn Duncan Sr TN 2 YeaLaMar Baker TN 3 YeaJoe L Evins TN 4 YeaRichard Fulton TN 5 YeaWilliam Anderson naval officer TN 6 YeaRay Blanton TN 7 YeaEd Jones Tennessee politician TN 8 YeaDan Kuykendall TN 9 YeaWright Patman TX 1 YeaJohn Dowdy TX 2 Not votingJames M Collins TX 3 YeaRay Roberts TX 4 Not votingEarle Cabell TX 5 YeaOlin E Teague TX 6 YeaBill Archer TX 7 YeaRobert C Eckhardt TX 8 YeaJack Bascom Brooks TX 9 YeaJ J Pickle TX 10 YeaWilliam R Poage TX 11 NayJim Wright TX 12 YeaGraham B Purcell Jr TX 13 YeaJohn Andrew Young TX 14 YeaKika de la Garza TX 15 YeaRichard Crawford White TX 16 YeaOmar Burleson TX 17 NayRobert Dale Price TX 18 YeaGeorge H Mahon TX 19 YeaHenry B Gonzalez TX 20 YeaO C Fisher TX 21 NayRobert R Casey TX 22 YeaAbraham Kazen TX 23 YeaK Gunn McKay UT 1 YeaSherman P Lloyd UT 2 YeaRobert T Stafford VT at large YeaThomas Pelly WA 1 YeaLloyd Meeds WA 2 YeaJulia Butler Hansen WA 3 YeaMike McCormack WA 4 YeaTom Foley WA 5 YeaFloyd Hicks WA 6 YeaBrock Adams WA 7 YeaBob Mollohan WV 1 YeaHarley Orrin Staggers WV 2 YeaJohn M Slack Jr WV 3 YeaKen Hechler WV 4 YeaJames Kee WV 5 YeaLes Aspin WI 1 YeaRobert Kastenmeier WI 2 YeaVernon Wallace Thomson WI 3 YeaClement J Zablocki WI 4 YeaHenry S Reuss WI 5 YeaWilliam A Steiger WI 6 YeaDave Obey WI 7 YeaJohn W Byrnes WI 8 YeaGlenn Robert Davis WI 9 YeaAlvin O Konski WI 10 YeaTeno Roncalio WY at large Yea Ratification by the states edit Having been passed by the 92nd United States Congress the proposed Twenty sixth Amendment was sent to the state legislatures for their consideration Which state was the first to officially ratify the amendment was a matter of dispute the Minnesota legislature approved the amendment at 3 14 p m CST 4 14 p m EST minutes before U S Senate president pro tempore Allen J Ellender officially approved the federal law at approximately 4 35 39 or 4 40 p m EST 40 Legislators in Delaware which ratified the amendment at 4 51 p m argued that Minnesota s ratification was invalid because the amendment had not yet been sent to the states 39 41 The U S Senate parliamentarian ruled that Minnesota acted prematurely but the legality of its ratification of the amendment was never officially challenged 39 Ratification was completed on June 30 1971 after the amendment had been ratified by thirty eight states Which state was the 38th to ratify and thus put the amendment into effect has also been disputed Contemporaneous reports agree that Ohio s House of Representatives cast the decisive vote on the evening of June 30 and that Alabama and North Carolina had ratified the amendment earlier in the day 42 43 As of 2013 however the Government Printing Office states that North Carolina did not complete its ratification of the amendment until July 1 at which time it became the 38th state to ratify 44 Additionally Alabama governor George Wallace claimed that his state was the 38th to ratify because he did not sign the ratification resolution until after North Carolina and Ohio completed their ratifications however the approval of the governor is not required to ratify an amendment 45 Minnesota March 23 1971 4 14 p m EST 40 Delaware March 23 1971 4 51 p m EST 39 Tennessee March 23 1971 5 10 p m EST 46 Washington March 23 1971 5 42 p m EST 46 Connecticut March 23 1971 5 53 p m EST 46 Hawaii March 24 1971 Massachusetts March 24 1971 Montana March 29 1971 Arkansas March 30 1971 Idaho March 30 1971 Iowa March 30 1971 Nebraska April 2 1971 New Jersey April 3 1971 Kansas April 7 1971 Michigan April 7 1971 Alaska April 8 1971 Maryland April 8 1971 Indiana April 8 1971 Maine April 9 1971 Vermont April 16 1971 Louisiana April 17 1971 California April 19 1971 Colorado April 27 1971 Pennsylvania April 27 1971 Texas April 27 1971 South Carolina April 28 1971 West Virginia April 28 1971 New Hampshire May 13 1971 Arizona May 14 1971 Rhode Island May 27 1971 New York June 2 1971 Oregon June 4 1971 Missouri June 14 1971 Wisconsin June 22 1971 Illinois June 29 1971 44 Alabama June 30 1971 North Carolina June 30 1971 43 Ohio June 30 1971 42 Having been ratified by three fourths of the States 38 the Twenty sixth Amendment became part of the Constitution On July 5 1971 the Administrator of General Services Robert Kunzig certified its adoption President Nixon and Julianne Jones Joseph W Loyd Jr and Paul S Larimer of the Young Americans in Concert also signed the certificate as witnesses During the signing ceremony held in the East Room of the White House Nixon talked about his confidence in the youth of America As I meet with this group today I sense that we can have confidence that America s new voters America s young generation will provide what America needs as we approach our 200th birthday not just strength and not just wealth but the Spirit of 76 a spirit of moral courage a spirit of high idealism in which we believe in the American dream but in which we realize that the American dream can never be fulfilled until every American has an equal chance to fulfill it in their own life 47 The amendment was subsequently ratified by five more states bringing the total number of ratifying states to forty three 44 39 Oklahoma July 1 1971 40 Virginia July 8 1971 41 Wyoming July 8 1971 42 Georgia October 4 1971 43 South Dakota March 4 2014 48 No action has been taken on the amendment by the states of Florida Kentucky Mississippi Nevada New Mexico North Dakota or Utah See also editFifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution 1870 extending vote to non white men Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution 1920 women s right to vote Representation of the People Act 1969 legislation in the United Kingdom with equivalent effect References edit The 26th Amendment History November 27 2019 Retrieved July 30 2020 The 26th Amendment of the U S Constitution National Constitution Center The 26th Amendment of the U S Constitution Retrieved June 3 2019 United States Government Printing Office Reduction of Voting Age Twenty Sixth Amendment PDF Vaughn Vanessa E DOMESTIC AFFAIRS Twenty Sixth Amendment Defining Documents The 1970s pp 145 147 a b Neale Thomas H Lowering the Voting Age was not a New Idea in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 p 35 Neale Thomas H Lowering the Voting Age was not a New Idea in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 pp 36 37 Dwight D Eisenhower Public Papers of the Presidents January 7 1954 p 22 University of California Santa Barbara The American Presidency Project Commencement Address at Texas Christian University Neale Thomas H Lowering the Voting Age was not a New Idea in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 p 38 a b c d e de Schweinitz Rebecca May 22 2015 The Proper Age for Suffrage Age in America NYU Press pp 209 236 doi 10 18574 nyu 9781479870011 003 0011 ISBN 978 1 4798 7001 1 De Schweinitz Rebecca 2009 If we could change the world young people and America s long struggle for racial equality The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 3235 6 OCLC 963537002 Kennedy Edward M The Time Has Come to Let Young People Vote in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 pp 56 64 University of California Santa Barbara Statement on Signing the Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970 presidency ucsb edu Richard Nixon Public Papers of the Presidents June 22 1970 p 512 Educational Broadcasting Corporation 2006 Majority Rules Oregon v Mitchell 1970 PBS 18 for Georgia and Kentucky 19 for Alaska and 20 for Hawaii Neale Thomas H The Eighteen Year Old Vote The Twenty Sixth Amendment and Subsequent Voting Rates of Newly Enfranchised Age Groups 1983 Oregon v Mitchell LII Legal Information Institute Retrieved June 3 2019 Graham Fred P in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 p 67 Nixon Richard Changing the Voting age will Require a Constitutional Amendment in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 pp 70 77 Tokaji Daniel P 2006 Intent and Its Alternatives Defending the New Voting Rights Act PDF Alabama Law Review 58 353 Retrieved July 29 2015 Oregon v Mitchell 400 U S 112 1970 pp 188 121 Making Civics Real Workshop 2 Essential Readings Annenberg Learner Archived from the original on June 8 2019 Retrieved October 29 2015 Carleton William G Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 p 47 Carleton William G Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 p 48 49 Carleton William G Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 p 49 Carleton William G Teen Voting Would Accelerate Undesirable Changes in the Democratic Process in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 pp 50 51 Kilpatrick James J The States are being Extorted into Ratifying the Twenty sixth Amendment in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 pp 123 127 Gallup George The Majority of Americans Favor the Twenty sixth Amendment in Amendment XXVI Lowering the Voting Age ed Engdahl Sylvia New York Greenhaven Press 2010 pp 128 130 Graham Fred P May 15 1968 Voting Age of 18 Is Supported By Four Senators at a Hearing The New York Times p 23 Sperling Godfrey Jr February 13 1971 Bayh peers into dual voting thicket Fraud possibilities weighed Intolerable burden The Christian Science Monitor MacKenzie John P February 13 1971 Bayh Favors Amendment To End Vote at 18 Chaos The Washington Post pp A2 Amendment on Vote at 18 Gains a Step The Chicago Tribune United Press International March 3 1971 pp C1 Senate Journal of the Senate 92nd Congress 1st session 1971 S S J Res 7 House Gets 18 Vote After Senate OKs It The Evening Press Binghamton New York Associated Press March 11 1971 p 12 House Journal of the House 92nd Congress 1st session 1971 H S J Res 7 Milutin Tomanovic ed 1972 Hronika međunarodnih događaja 1971 The Chronicle of International Events in 1971 in Serbo Croatian Belgrade Institute of International Politics and Economics p 2608 House of Representatives Vote On 26th Amendment March 23 1971 Archived from the original on January 20 2020 a b c d Schamdeke John and Jack Nolan 18 year old vote passes House is sent to states Wilmington Morning News March 24 1971 pages 1 and 2 a b State Ratifies Vote Amendment Minneapolis Tribune March 24 1971 page 14A State Cries Foul In Ratifying Race Wilmington Evening Journal March 24 1971 pages 1 and 2 a b Wheat Warren 18 Year Old Vote In Ohio Does It Cincinnati Enquirer July 1 1971 front page a b 18 Year Old Vote Now Law N C Ohio Ratify Amendment Charlotte Observer July 1 1971 pages 1A and 2A a b c The Constitution of the United States of America Analysis and Interpretation Centennial Edition Interim Edition Analysis of Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to June 26 2013 PDF Washington DC U S Government Printing Office 2013 p 44 Retrieved April 13 2014 Wallace says Alabama was key to ballot Bowling Green Sentinel Tribune July 2 1971 front page a b c Morse Charles F J Legislature Ratifies 18 Year Old Vote Hartford Courant March 24 1971 pages 1 and 2 Remarks at a Ceremony Marking the Certification of the 26th Amendment to the Constitution The American Presidency Project University of California Santa Barbara Retrieved April 29 2023 Senate Joint Resolution 1 South Dakota Legislature Pierre South Dakota SD Legislative Research Council Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 Further reading edit Caplan Sheri J Old Enough How 18 Year Olds Won the Vote amp Why it Matters Heath Hen 2020 ISBN 978 1 7354 9300 8 External links editCRS Annotated Constitution Twenty sixth Amendment Eric Fish The Twenty sixth Amendment Enforcement Power Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Twenty sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution amp oldid 1192757019, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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