
|
THE HISTORY OF IMMIGRANT VOTING RIGHTS IN WASHINGTON STATE
The Immigrant Voting Project and
The original state
Constitution of 1889 required voters to be U.S. citizens.[2]
This coincided with the removal of women’s suffrage, which had been granted
by the Washington Territorial legislature in 1883.[3]
However, it also provided a limited incorporation of the alien suffrage
provisions of Washington territory, so that male declarant aliens already
holding the right to vote continued to have that right. In 1896, a
constitutional amendment further provided that “[t]he legislature shall
enact laws defining the manner of ascertaining the qualifications of voters
as to their ability to read and speak the English language.”[4] [1] Washington Territorial Assembly, House Bill No 1, Ch 1, Section 1, available at http://www.digitalarchives.wa.gov/Content.aspx?txt=records (digital archives of the Washington Secretary of State) as accessed 11/01/04. These requirements previously to be found in Section 5 of the Act to establish the Territorial Government of Washington, 1853, Thirty-second Congress, Second Session. [2] WA Const. of 1889, Art. VI, § 1. [3] Women’s right to vote was recovered in Amendment 5 of 1910. [4] WA Const. Art. VI, § 1, West Historical Notes. [5] WA Const. Art. VI, § 1. _________________________ |
||
|
|
||