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5 Sentences With "giving voting rights to"

How to use giving voting rights to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "giving voting rights to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "giving voting rights to". Mastering all the usages of "giving voting rights to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Opponents of the transition said it could stifle online freedom by giving voting rights to authoritarian governments.
But the movement made national headlines only in 2016, when Virginia's Democratic governor at the time, Terry McAuliffe, signed an order giving voting rights to some 6663,000 former felons.
Some Republican lawmakers are trying to block the handover to global stakeholders, which include businesses, tech experts and public interest advocates, saying it could stifle online freedom by giving voting rights to authoritarian governments.
Citing data compiled by the Brennan Center for Justice, the report said that as of March, more than 40 states had passed or were considering bills expanding access to voting, for instance by easing the voter registration process, expanding early voting and giving voting rights to convicted felons.
We are then involved in > a totally academic discussion. In chapter two, entitled "Tricky holds a press conference", Dixon takes questions from reporters with names to suit their respective personalities. The reporters are called Mr. Asslick (who, as his name suggests, "sucks up" to the President), Mr. Daring (who poses, as suggested, the more daring suggestions in the style of investigative journalism), Mr. Respectful (who acts rather meekly compared to some of his compatriots), Mr. Shrewd (who, being slightly more daring than Mr. Daring, suggests President Dixon may be giving voting rights to the unborn for purely political reasons), Miss Charming (the typical female reporter often stereotyped in media as 'charming' indeed), Mr. Practical (concerned not with the politics of the situation, but the when and the how much of the situation). From this starting point, Roth satirizes Nixon and his cabinet—particularly Henry Kissinger ("Highbrow coach") and Spiro Agnew ("Vice President-what's-his-name")—as Tricky tries to deny that he supports sexual intercourse, provoking a group of Boy Scouts to riot in Washington, D.C. in which three are shot.

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