Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
As the right of voting carries with it the right to hold any elective office, a great change must take place in Washington life.
Mr C. might have said, 'But this very duty incapacitates them for the right of voting and taking part in the governmental concerns of the state.'
"you want to be ruled by islamic laws of the prophet's time, almost fifteen hundred years ago enforced chador, the loss of our hard-won rights of voting, working, and being equal?"
Even in 1789, long after revenue officers ceased to personally exercise the right of voting, and were rarely active in county politics, their promotions were still determined by their connection to voters.
Of the sixty thousand, only five thousand were citizens, some thirty thousand were slaves, and the remaining twenty-five thousand were residents possessing no rights of voting or claims to consideration by the city-state.
"The vast majority of inmates are going to return to their community," Mr. Gold said, adding, "that very basic and important right of voting is part of trying to get them functioning as taxpayers, rather than tax users."
The situation of disfranchisement did not change markedly until passage in the 1960s of federal civil rights legislation that protected and enforced the constitutional rights of voting and citizenship for African Americans and other minorities.
In the event the petition against the election result was upheld and the election declared void, and a decision of the Commons in another dispute election, in 1690, confirmed that the right of voting was in the freemen.
Party and its leader were together with voters on Election Day and came forward against the numerous cases of depriving of the right of voting, and on October 16, when voters protested against falsification of election results.
If charters were constructed so as to express in direct terms, "that every inhabitant, who is not a member of a corporation, shall not exercise the right of voting," such charters would, in the face, be charters not of rights, but of exclusion.
"This is a decision based primarily on the demands of our people, the working people of Zimbabwe who wish to exercise their hard-fought and inalienable right of voting and still make a statement against the tyranny of this criminal state," Mr. Nyathi said.
But in 304, Fabius Rullianus limited them to the four city tribes, and from that time the term meant a man degraded from a higher (country) to a lower (city) tribe, but not deprived of the right of voting or of serving in the army.
At the convention of 4 June 1639 (O. S.) Eaton took exception to the fifth article of the constitution, which limited the right of voting and of holding public office to church members only on the ground that 'the free planters ought not to surrender this power out of their hands.'
When the proctors of the clergy refused to agree to this measure, the irate monarch deprived them of the right of voting, confiscated church lands and suppressed monasteries, in some cases shedding the blood of their inmates, in the remaining cases evicting them and making them homeless and poor.