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"Let Us Vote!"

Youth Voting Rights and the 26th Amendment

Jennifer Frost

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NYU Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / 20. Jahrhundert (bis 1945)

Beschreibung

The fascinating tale of how a bipartisan coalition worked successfully to lower the voting age

“Let Us Vote!” tells the story of the multifaceted endeavor to achieve youth voting rights in the United States. Over a thirty-year period starting during World War II, Americans, old and young, Democrat and Republican, in politics and culture, built a movement for the 26th Amendment to the US Constitution, which lowered the voting age from twenty-one to eighteen in 1971. This was the last time that the United States significantly expanded voting rights.

Jennifer Frost deftly illustrates how the political and social movements of the time brought together bipartisan groups to work tirelessly in pursuit of a lower voting age. In turn, she illuminates the process of achieving political change, with the convergence of “top-down” initiatives and “bottom-up” mobilization, coalition-building, and strategic flexibility. As she traces the progress toward achieving youth suffrage throughout the ’60s, Frost reveals how this movement built upon the social justice initiatives of the decade and was deeply indebted to the fight for African American civil and voting rights.

2021 marks the fiftieth anniversary of this important constitutional amendment and comes at a time when scrutiny of both voting age and voting rights has been renewed. As the national conversation around climate crisis, gun violence, and police brutality creates a new call for a lower voting age, “Let Us Vote!” provides an essential investigation of how this massive political change occurred, and how it could be brought about again.

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Schlagwörter

Oregon v. Mitchell (1970), Jennings Randolph, Social movements, Youth activism, Charles C. Diggs, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Voting rights, Birch Bayh, US Constitution, Mike Mansfield, 1960s, John F. Kennedy, Baby boom, War on Poverty, Youth, Youth Franchise Coalition, Vietnam War, Richard Nixon, 18-year-old vote, 26th Amendment, Edward M. Kennedy, National Education Association, Politics, Democratic National Convention, Civil rights movement, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Hugo Black, Youth suffrage