Question:
why was women getting the vote a significant change?
Lala
2012-08-28 04:51:43 UTC
why was it a significant change in the status of women? it recognized equality, but why else? need help with history essay.
Six answers:
auty
2012-08-28 09:00:00 UTC
It recognized equality as you said and changed the demographics. Politicians then (and now) had a new group to appeal to which Romney is failing miserably in.
Historyguy
2012-08-28 09:59:21 UTC
In terms of rights its a significant step towards an equal society. The voting population nearly doubled. In terms of wider politics I don't know that it's that significant. Advocates of woman suffrage had always argued that female voters would have a salutary impact on politics. But you'd be somewhat hard pressed to note major changes between the pre and post suffrage era. The main exception is, obviously, women's rights issues. Without women voters other issues related to women's rights would have been much slower to develop.
Randal
2012-08-28 05:01:31 UTC
Women won the vote. They were not given it, granted it, or anything else. They won it as truly as any political campaign is ultimately won or lost. And they won it, repeatedly, by the slimmest of margins, which only underscores the difficulty and magnitude of their victories. In the successful California referendum of 1911, the margin was one vote per precinct! In the House, suffrage passed the first time by exactly the number needed with supporters coming in from the hospital and funeral home to cast their ballots. In the Senate it passed by two votes. The ratification in Tennessee, the last state, passed the legislature in 1920 by a single vote, at the very last minute, during a recount.



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I hope this is helpful.
Bilbo
2012-08-28 05:10:11 UTC
Rather depends where you were as to who and when women got the vote. Why it mattered was it changed the voting demographic - in the UK it was one of the contributing factors to the rise of the Labour party - since its founder Kier Hardie had been a champion of the suffragette movement and it would (eventually) lead to equality laws which changed the status of women. Some countries were far ahead on this, and it was only one of many factors in the struggle for emancipation - many women would still vote as their husbands told them to.
mustard
2016-10-01 13:48:06 UTC
Welfare is to aid folks that want it. in unhealthy fiscal occasions it has the extra advantage to the economic system that it is helping to maintain the economic system from shrinking additional within the final elections it used to be a transparent contest among insurance policies that might advantage the extremely wealthy and significant industry on the cost of pushing the center and deficient additional down the ladder a a lot more predominant query is: why did such a lot of vote Against President Obama despite the truth that there used to be a better fee to themselves. this can be a excellent illustration of "mind washing" and propaganda through the extremely proper to mis lead socially conservative citizens to vote AGAINST their received fiscal pursuits. the "greenbacks" video is natural propaganda and lies" Most (no longer all of path) men and women might relatively wish a danger to earn alternatively than be simply given matters. that's a major mental fact. men and women grow to be "elegant " on welfare whilst they have got no different possibility or schooling.
Lyne
2012-08-28 04:57:24 UTC
Before women got to vote, they were considered the "property" of men (chattel, to be precise). We were basically bought and sold through marriage and other arrangements and our opinion was not considered valid in any arena. When we got the vote, it recognized a significant change in our social status. We were no longer "property" but human beings, like men, who could contribute to society in a meaningful, productive way, and our voices could be heard. Voting means your voice and your opinion count. The change was significant indeed.


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