Twenty-Fourth Amendment in the United States
Twenty-Fourth Amendment
United States Constitution
According to the Encyclopedia of the American Constitution, about its article titled 354 TWENTY-FOURTH AMENDMENTThe Twenty-Fourth Amendment, written by Senator Spessard Holland of Florida, was proposed by Congress on August 27, 1962, and became part of the Constitution on February 4, 1964. The amendment provides that the right of United States citizens to vote for federal officers
(read more about Constitutional law entries here).
Some Constitutional Law Popular Entries
- Constitutional Law Outline
- Constitutional Law Outline (United States)
- Constitutional Lawyer
- Constitutional Law of India
- Constitutional Law Definition
- Constitutional Law Cases
- Constitutional Law Cases (United States)
Twenty-Fourth U.S. Constitutional Amendment (1964)
Twenty-Fourth U.S. Constitutional Amendment, 1964
Twenty-Fourth Amendment in the U.S. Legal History
Summary
This amendment, adopted in 1964, barred a poll tax in federal elections.