Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
November 3: The 2nd Ohio women's suffrage amendment is rejected. [7] 1915. The Ohio Woman Suffrage Association (OWSA) invites NAWSA and the Congressional Union (CU) to set up offices in Ohio. [15] 1916. June 6: The Municipal Suffrage Amendment in East Cleveland passes with 426 votes, allowing women to vote in city elections. [42]
Let Ohio Women Vote postcard. Women's rights issues in Ohio were put into the public eye in the early 1850s. Women inspired by the Declaration of Rights and Sentiments at the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention created newspapers and then set up their own conventions, including the 1850 Ohio Women's Rights Convention which was the first women's right's convention outside of New York and the first ...
No Republican has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio, and since the advent of the duopoly two-party system, Democrats have won the presidency without winning Ohio only eight times, in the elections noted above. Winners of the state are in bold. Party abbreviations: D = Democratic; R = Republican; D-R = Democratic-Republican; Fed ...
Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., who has been public about her own decision as a young woman to get an abortion, said Tuesday’s vote in Ohio was a “win for reproductive freedom everywhere.”
Just to the north of Franklin County, Delaware County swung to Trump, 52.8% to 46.2%, with 99% of the vote in, an approximate 6% margin — nearly identical to his 2020 vote, 52.6% to 45.8%.
Due to a close split in party registration, it has been key battleground state. No Republican has ever been elected president without winning Ohio. In 2004, Ohio was the tipping point state, as Bush won the state with 51% of the vote, giving him its 20 electoral votes and the margin he needed in the Electoral College for re-election.
Two Ohio women have joined Time’s 100 most influential people of 2024. ... with more than 56% of the vote. ... Pictures of L.A. fire damage show aftermath of California blazes.
Women were granted the right to vote in Wyoming in 1869, before the territory had become a full state in the union. In 1889, when the Wyoming constitution was drafted in preparation for statehood, it included women's suffrage. Thus Wyoming was also the first full state to grant women the right to vote. [24]