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Ra4esearch Service
The Nineteenth Amendment and Women's
Suffrage Part 5: Supreme Court
Interpretations
January 13, 2023
This Legal Sidebar is the fifth in a six-part series that discusses the Nineteenth Amendment to the
Constitution, which recognized women's voting rights. Shortly before Election Day 2022, a group of
people gathered in Rochester, New York, to honor the late social reformer and women's rights activist,
Susan B. Anthony. About 150 years earlier, Anthony cast a ballot in the 1872 presidential election. She
was arrested and charged with illegally voting as a woman in violation of federal law. She unsuccessfully
claimed that the Fourteenth Amendment gave her the right to vote as a privilege of citizenship. A federal
district court imposed a fine of $100 on Anthony, but she never paid it. As the nation marks the 150th
anniversary of Anthony's vote-and the 2020 centennial of the Nineteenth Amendment's ratification-
Congress may be interested in the history and impact of the women's suffrage movement and the
Nineteenth Amendment. Additional information on this topic will be published in the Constitution
Annotated: Analysis and Interpretation of the US Constitution.
The Supreme Court has not decided many cases interpreting the Nineteenth Amendment. In the only
significant case addressing the Amendment's effect, Breedlove v. Suttles, the Court upheld a Georgia law
that required state residents between the ages of 21 and 60 to pay a poll tax. The law exempted women
who did not register to vote from paying the tax. However, men between 21 and 60 years of age were
required to pay the tax, regardless of whether they registered to vote.
A 28-year-old male who sought to register to vote challenged the law as a violation of the Fourteenth and
Nineteenth Amendments. The Court acknowledged that the Nineteenth Amendment protected men's
voting rights in addition to women's. However, the Court determined, without much elaboration, that the
tax did not deny or abridge a man's right to vote on account of his sex.
Almost three decades later, in Harper v. Virginia State Board of Elections, the Supreme Court overruled
Breedlove, determining that imposing a poll tax on voters in state elections violated the Fourteenth
Amendment's Equal Protection Clause. The Court held that conditioning a voter's participation in state
elections upon payment of a poll tax discriminated against prospective voters based on their wealth.
However, in Harper, the Court did not revisit Breedlove's Nineteenth Amendment holding.
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
LSB10900
CRS Legal Sidebar
Prepared for Members and
Committees of Congress

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