- Elective rights
Two central issues for democracies are the right to candidate, and
suffrage or the franchise—that is, the decision as to who is entitled to vote. For example,Athenian democracy limited the vote to male citizens, while slaves, foreigners, and women of any status were excluded. Requirements and exclusions such as these, along with racial prohibitions, have been common in democracies. The definition oflegal personhood has been historically tied up with these questions.Generally, franchise is restricted on account of one or more of the following:
*age (in all democracies),
*gender,
*nationality,
*race,
*religion,
*wealth,
*birth ("e.g.", inherited social status),
*education,
*previous crimes, etc.Most contemporary democracies agree that only age, citizenship and (in some jurisdictions) serious, previously-committed crimes are the only of these restrictions which apply. One prominent exception to this is the limited representation available for denizens of the capital of the United States,
Washington, DC (seeDistrict of Columbia voting rights ).A recent example of how the "right to vote" changed over history is New Zealand, which was the first country to give women the right to vote (
September 19 ,1893 ), though not the right to be elected. The participation in politics "via" both candidacy and suffrage in Europe and the Americas is, largely, a 20th century phenomenon.Sex equity has been recognized in other ways in other societies, however. The
Iroquois Confederacy gave a strong political role to women perhaps to as far back as its origins in the 12th century, although, as in 19th century New Zealand, this was expressed as support for a specific male, not the right to sit in council. The Iroquois Confederacy, like many Native American societies, recognized rituals to allow post-menopausal or powerful widowed women to assume the role of a man—because of this, it is possible that at some point in its history, the Confederacy permitted a full and formal role to women.Some limited (to a greater or lesser degree) alternative voting and official appointing systems claim to be democratic. One-party states such as the
People's Republic of China apply a limited form ofdisapproval voting that helps to signal the acceptance of those promoted into new posts. Those who do not receive very high (over 80%) acceptance generally rise no further in rank or position.Under
perestroika , shortly before its collapse, theUnion of Soviet Socialist Republics underMikhail Gorbachev implemented reforms to allow multiple candidates, all from the localCommunist Party , to run against each other. Such methods are not generally viewed as providing an equivalent political expression to the right to replace an entire centralized power group by way of election, as can occur in a multi-party system.Another means of limited democracy is that practiced in the
Islamic Republic of Iran , where the right to run as a candidate is controlled by the religious authorities. Such groups as theCommunist Party and theGreen Party of Iran are excluded from the slate of candidates. Recent elections in Iran have suffered from very low turnout.In the
United States of America, restrictions on the right to vote due toproperty ownership or lack thereof, and in some placesliteracy , were common until theVoting Rights Act of 1965. Today all but a few states deny the right to vote to those who have been convicted of afelony at any point in their past (voting rights are, in some cases, restored "via" executive (on the state or federal level) pardon).In the
European Union every citizen has the right to participate in the elections of theEuropean Parliament . Not every vote is counted equally, however: Voters from bigger countries are significantly underrepresented relative to voters from smaller countries. E.g., a vote fromLuxembourg carries 12 times as much weight as does a vote fromGermany . It should be noted however, that many jurisdictions have similar problems with the distribution of votes per region. In the US, aCalifornia n vote carries four times the weight of aMontana vote in the presidential election. [http://www.eleves.ens.fr:8080/home/madore/misc/us-voting.html]ee also
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