Yes. They voted for it in the first place.
For the previous 10 years, most MPs had supported giving women the vote, but some had not, including Prime Minister Herbert Asquith. In 1909, 255 out of 343 MPs had voted to support giving women the vote. However, the proposal failed because Asquith "forgot" to give it time in Parliament. He was replaced by a supporter David Lloyd George in 1916.
Pankhurst was a leading British women's rights activist who led the movement to win the right for women to vote
in 1920. to be precise i think it is august 8, 1920
In the U.S. it was August 26, 1920. For Dutch women, 1919. British women over 30 were allowed to vote in 1918. France - 1944 Italy - 1946 Our neighbors to the North, Canada - finally allowed women to vote in all provinces in 1940 (Quebec was the last to do so).
Men were able to vote in the 1920s as long as they were older than 21. Women could vote if they were over 30, a law passed by the British Parliamant, the law was changed that women could vote at the age of 21 in 1928. African Americans could not vote until The Voting Rights Act of 1965.
no women werent aloud to vote
1918
1918
Women couldn't vote at all before 1918.
1918 for women aged 30 & over 1928 for women over 21 (The same voting rights as men)
There were many different elections before women could vote, the right to vote was not obtained until 1921 by women.
in 1918 women over 30 got the right to vote
1918
In Ireland, the right to vote was granted to women in 1898 for local government elections, and in 1918 for general elections.
1918 (women over 30) mostly because of the contribution of women in ww1 and the suffrage protests. In 1928 all women could vote women in Britain could vote after the age of 30 in 1918 (after ww1) by 1928, the age was lowered to 21 (equal to men)
Well, if you could've specified, what coutry it was, This might've been more helpful, in Britian, British Women At the Age 30 or over, had to vote in 1918. But In 1919, American Women And Dutch women, were in states that denied Women suffrage.
Some women were given the vote in 1918 but it wasn't until 1928 that all women had the same voting rights as men.
Women were first given the right to vote in 1918. The first election they voted in was in 1920 when Warren G. Harding ran against James M. Cox.