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  2. Women's suffrage in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_suffrage_in_the...

    By the end of 1919, women effectively could vote for president in states with 326 electoral votes out of a total of 531. [259] Political leaders who became convinced of the inevitability of women's suffrage began to pressure local and national legislators to support it so that their respective party could claim credit for it in future elections ...

  3. List of female United States presidential and vice ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_female_United...

    Lydia Maria Child and Lucretia Mott received one vote apiece for president at the 1847 convention of the Liberty League, a caucus of the abolitionist Liberty Party. [1] Mott was a candidate for vice president at the rump Liberty Party's 1848 convention, where she finished fifth out of a field of nine candidates.

  4. Voting gender gap in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_gender_gap_in_the...

    A gender gap in voting typically refers to the difference in the percentage of men and women who vote for a particular candidate. [1] It is calculated by subtracting the percentage of women supporting a candidate from the percentage of men supporting a candidate (e.g., if 55 percent of men support a candidate and 44 percent of women support the same candidate, there is an 11-point gender gap).

  5. When did women gain the right to vote? The history of the ...

    www.aol.com/did-women-gain-vote-history...

    19 th Amendment. Women in the U.S. won the right to vote for the first time in 1920 when Congress ratified the 19th Amendment.The fight for women’s suffrage stretched back to at least 1848, when ...

  6. The female candidates who paved the way for Kamala Harris’s ...

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    Kamala Harris is only the second woman to be a major party's presidential candidate, following Hillary Clinton in 2016. In 1872, Victoria Woodhull ran for president without the right to vote, and ...

  7. Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nineteenth_Amendment_to...

    The strategy, which she later called "The Winning Plan", had several goals: women in states that had already granted presidential suffrage (the right to vote for the President) would focus on passing a federal suffrage amendment; women who believed they could influence their state legislatures would focus on amending their state constitutions ...

  8. Timeline of women's suffrage in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_women's...

    The focus turns to working at the state level. Wyoming renewed general women's suffrage, becoming the first state to allow women to vote. [6] [3] [8] 1890: A suffrage campaign loses in South Dakota. [6] 1893: After a campaign led by Carrie Chapman Catt, Colorado men vote for women's suffrage. [6]

  9. Democrats dismissed Glenn Youngkin's emphasis on schools, but it may have helped cost them an election in a state they were favored to win.