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re-enfranchise
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re-enfranchise
re-enˈfranchise, v. Also 7 re-in-. [re- 5 a.] trans. To enfranchise († set free) again. So re-enˈfranchisement.1611 Florio, Raffrancare, to re-enfranchise or set at libertie. 1660 N. Ingelo Bentiv. & Ur. ii. (1682) 147 A price paid down for the re-infranchising of inslav'd Men. 1888 G. W. Cable in L...
Oxford English Dictionary
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James T. White (politician)
Political failures and later career
Early in 1874, Republican Governor Elisha Baxter moved to re-enfranchise former Confederate soldiers, a move that alienated
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There Are Good Reasons for Felons to Lose the Right to Vote
Automatic re-enfranchisment — if that is what Mr. Will wants — would miss that opportunity. And it would inevitably re-enfranchise thousands, maybe millions, of felons who have not changed ...
www.heritage.org
Sligo Borough (UK Parliament constituency)
In 1881 the county's MP, Thomas Sexton, introduced a private member's bill to re-enfranchise the borough, which was defeated on second reading.
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For the People Act
that it would prevent forms of voter suppression like voter-roll purges; that it would reduce the influence of dark money in politics; that it would re-enfranchise
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Brooks–Baxter War
The Brindle-tails' platform included a proposal for a new constitution that would re-enfranchise ex-Confederates, which appealed to Democrats and pre-war reorganized the militia by placing it under the control of the State, rather than the governor, and pushed for an amendment to the state constitution to re-enfranchise
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en.wikipedia.org